
The film that changed Haing Ngor's life. Directed by Roland Joffe. Screenplay by Bruce Robinson.

"The New York Times'" correspondent Sydney Schanberg's original story on Dith Pran, on which "The Killing Fields" is based.

Dr. Haing Ngor's story in his own words.

Photojournalist Nic Dunlop's memoir on finding Kaing Guek Euv, otherwise known as Duch.

A seminal work on Cambodia outlining how President Nixon and his Secretary of State Henry Kissinger carpet-bombed Cambodia so extensively - not to mention the illegal 1970 invasion - that it fueled the rise of the the Khmer Rouge. If you've ever wondered why Henry Kissinger is a war-criminal, this book's for you.

Francois Bizot, a French academic, is one of the few people to survive having been held prisoner by Kaing Guek Euv, alias Duch. He was also put in the heartbreaking position of maintaining the French embassy as a diplomatic zone as the Khmer Rouge took control of Phnom Penh.

A lovely documentary on Haing Ngor's own experiences making the film, "The Killing Fields," and escaping the Khmer Rouge.

A true-crime program featuring Detective Sergeant John Garcia, the LAPD investigator on the Haing Ngor murder, and for whom it became a personal obsession. Season 1; Episode 3. That said, there's an internal contradiction in the episode about the investigation that is without resolution.

Christophe Peschoux's extended iinterview with Kaing Guek Euv that became part of a legal dossier at the Khmer Rouge tribunal. Referenced in "Finding Comrade Duch" episodes 9 and 10

Jon Swain's memoir of his time in Cambodia as correspondent for the Sunday Times, and beyond. A lovely read.

The Fall of Phnom Penh. Photographs by Roland Neveu.