A war correspondent describes people and events of the war in Bosnia where the entire country is a battleground and every person is a combatant, in an attempt to answer the question of why war exists.
Fourteen-year-old Alma narrates the story of a group of teenage war orphans who live at Hotel Sarajevo for more than a year scavenging for their needs.
Provides a historical overview of the Balkans and the wars that have taken place within the republics of the former Yugoslavia; looks at the source of the conflicts; presents details of the peace accord signed by the presidents of Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia; and discusses the role of the U.S. and NATO in the region.
This book presents nearly 500 alphabetical entries covering the people, places, events, concepts, and treaties that contributed to and shaped the conflict in the former Yugoslavia.
The author, having led thirty convoys of food, medicine, and other supplies into Bosnia between 1992 and 1996, writes a fictionalized account of the tragedy of the war as seen through the eyes of a child.
A full-color graphic story about the struggles of Ervin Rustemagic and his family to survive during the eighteen-month siege of Sarajevo in 1992-93, constructed by the author from faxes he received from Rustemagic during the bombardment.
Provides background information on the Bosnian conflict and presents the controversies surrounding the event, and offers first-person narratives from people who lived through or were impacted by the event.