USA TODAY US Edition

LIFE War crimes and sex spice up Turow’s ‘Testimony’

Legal thriller takes readers on a fun ride

- JOCELYN McCLURG

Escaping Kindle County seems to have had a rejuvenati­ng effect on novelist Scott Turow and his attorney hero, 54-year-old Bill ten Boom, who gets the case of a lifetime in The Hague and some mind-blowing sex along the way.

Testimony (Grand Central, 483 pp., out of four) — which, don’t get me wrong, is quite entertaini­ng — sometimes veers into Cialis ad territory. After all, what’s more urgent: middle-age male sexual angst, or the possible massacre of 400 gypsies in a refugee camp after the Bosnian war?

Bill, who goes by “Boom,” has left his marriage and packed up his Illinois law office, and is wrestling with the age-old “Is that all there is?” question when he’s tapped by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to investigat­e the massacre claims. Is Ferko Rincic, apparently the sole survivor, telling the truth when he testifies that armed, unidentifi­ed soldiers rounded up hundreds of Roma in 2004, herded them into a cave and set off explosives?

It’s 2015 and Boom, who nar- rates this tale, has to unearth the facts buried in that cave. Was a war crime committed?

Dark, unlikely fodder for a summer thriller, perhaps, but Turow’s lively prose and terrific cast of supporting characters make

Testimony one for the beach bag. This is a guy who knows what he’s doing: Turow has been crafting intricate, best-selling legal thrillers dating back to his blockbuste­r wifedunit, Presumed Inno

cent (30 years ago!). So now Boom, a good guy who really is a bit of a drip, is in Holland, feeling “flighty as a teenager” post-divorce.

(And yes, ten Boom has Dutch roots, which will figure into this labyrinthi­ne story.)

Watch out Boom! Here comes Esma Czarini, the va-va-voom Roma legal advocate who has only to breathe the word “Bill” to ensnare our horn-dog hero. (Cue the cringe-worthy sex scenes.)

Out of the bedroom, Boom, who once was the chief federal prosecutor in Kindle County, has to perform like a legal eagle. Plenty of people are throwing shade, among them Layton Merriwell, a former U.S. major general who lost his gig in a Petraeus-like sex scandal, and the fast-talking, foulmouthe­d (and hilarious) lesbian Sgt. Maj. Attlia Doby, who was in Bosnia with U.S. troops when the Roma disappeare­d. The suspects pile up: NATO? The U.S. Army? Laza Kajevic, the missing former leader of the Bosnian Serbs?

A screen-worthy subplot involving the whereabout­s of the chilling Kajevic (seemingly modeled on Radovan Karadžić) puts our Everyman hero in the kind of danger mild-mannered lawyers don’t encounter in Kindle County. Boom wanted to shake up his life. He got it.

Testimony is a fun ride, an odd thing to say about a novel that casts new light on Bosnian war atrocities and sketchy American arms deals, as well as midlife crises among smart ( but stupid) white guys. A weird, sometimes eyeball-rolling mix, but it works.

 ?? JEREMY LAWSON ?? Author Scott Turow’s latest legal thriller, Testimony, has parts that appear just right for the big screen.
JEREMY LAWSON Author Scott Turow’s latest legal thriller, Testimony, has parts that appear just right for the big screen.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States