Interviews with numerous victims of modern day slavery, carefully and objectively reported in a way to accurately convey their experiences. Some things that struck me:
-- How common this is, that countless people are in this situation, and there is probably almost nothing that can prevent this from continuing.
-- The lack of hatred in the victim's stories. Each person told how it happened that they became caught in that situation, what it was like, and how they finally broke free.
-- The void from those who did not escape. What ever became of them? Did most end up dying? Tragically, that is probably the case, although this book does not make that claim.
-- Hopeless situations are the common denominator in virtually every interview in this book. The person may have been an orphan who was sold by an unscrupulous guardian. Or was someone living in poverty, and who saw no other way to survive other than taking the path that put them into slavery. Although they were typically deceived by someone who promised them hope, only to spring a trap once it was too late for the person to back out.
Overall, though, this book made me feel there is hope, at least to some extent. By letting the victims be heard, so others can form a reasonably accurate picture of what is going on, maybe it will become more difficult to enslave someone. Because slavery thrives behind closed doors, and the more people who know what clues to look for, the harder it will be for a captor to remain unexposed.