In this volume, contributors reflect on how to teach and mediate difficult history from the perspectives of guides. Too often, their activities are undervalued and taken for granted. Guides represent an important, often forgotten group of educators. This volume takes a global view on guiding at memorial sites and museums in Europe, North America, and South Africa. The contributors to this volume show from different research traditions that it is worth understanding more about the guidesâ personal interests, their motivations, and their concept of guiding. Authors apply methodologies from the social sciences to describe the guidesâ point of view. Complementing the various approaches in tour guide research, a detailed linguistic analysis sheds light on a survivorâs testimony echoed in the guidesâ language. The studies gathered in this volume open up an orientation for further approaches to tour guiding based on and centered around âauthenticâ materials from guides.