OrvilleChubbyBasas
Twenty years ago, a nation fractured. Protests over corruption turned into an armed uprising, martial law returned under a familiar name, and families at home and abroad were torn apart by violence, silence, and exile.
Back Then is presented as the lost dissertation of historian Skylar Henderson, who pieces together fragments of a forgotten civil war: children's sketches of burning schools, smuggled letters from migrant workers who never came home, government communiqués that denied what the world already saw.
Drawing from testimonies, hidden archives, and half-buried maps, this book is less about heroes or villains and more about ordinary people caught in extraordinary times. It asks: how does a nation remember what it wants to forget? And what happens when silence becomes history itself?