A radi al departure from the style and storytelling genius of Presumed Inocent.
The Laws of Our Fathers is a disjointed storyline routinely broken by what is apparently tly the authors rant on his personal philosophy of life.
The characters are well developed In Their own Individual "Raison detre" by lengthy philosophical dis purse on their lives and history bit very poorly developed along any kind of compelling contribution to the unifying story line.
I will think lo g and hard about another economic or time investment in another Turow book if this is the new genre.