Read it. Be appalled. - written in the unrelenting tense of now - the horror never ends.The author's use of present tense works like an incantation, grasping you by the throat tightly, it makes you breathless in a hyperventilating kind of way, you cannot stop - only turn the page, trying to read ...
The one-story building featured nearly empty room after nearly empty room. In the lobby, our footsteps echoed against walls covered by a few instructional posters—how to breast-feed, how to do oral rehydration therapy—but there wasn’t much else besides a few empty wooden benches that lined the wa...