Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Turow shares ‘Testimony’ with Arts & Lectures

- By Marylynne Pitz Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

More than six years ago, novelist Scott Turow visited the Netherland­s, where he was subjected to some serious peer pressure.

At a cocktail party, several lawyers told the novelist and former federal prosecutor, “You’ve got to write a book about the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and the Hague,” Mr. Turow recalled during a telephone interview.

The party for Mr. Turow was hosted by his friend Fay HartogLevi­n, who was U.S. ambassador to the Netherland­s (2009-11). The author, who still practices law, has an insatiable appetite for fiction with an internatio­nal flavor. So, it’s not surprising that he warmed to the idea.

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court, he said, was created because world leaders recognized that war and genocide would continue.

“Societies will fall apart. ... And when that happens, horrible things occur,” the writer said.

The Chicago native speaks at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Carnegie Library Hall, Oakland, as part of the New & Noted series presented byPittsbur­gh Arts & Lectures.

His new book, “Testimony,” is a legal thriller set in the Hague, home of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court. The main character, 50year-old Bill ten Boom, has divorced his wife, left his law firm and moved to the Netherland­s.

At the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, he investigat­es the disappeara­nce of an entire village of Roma people during the Bosnian War. The case takes him to a salt

relatives lay dying in a Chicago hospital at the same time a leader of Chicago’s Roma communityw­as gravely ill.

“There were all these local Roma camped out in the hospital,” Mr. Turow said. After the Roma leader died, “The Roma were gone, but so were all the ashtrays.” He was utterly mystified. “Now what group of people on Earth does something like this to themselves, knowing that it is so logically counterpro­ductive? The next time somebody is sick, you can be sure the hospital will figure out a way not to treat them. What are the values that impel that kind of, in many ways, selfdefeat­ing behavior?”

The Roma, Mr. Turow

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