The Altar Boys: A Novel.
by Radhakrishnan, Narayan
The Altar Boys: A Novel
John M. Poswall
Jullunder Press
c/o Golden Temple Publishing Co.
1001G Street, Suite 301, Sacramento, CA 95814
goldentemplepub@aol.com
9780972999250, $14.95, February 2008
I am from India, and am a legal thriller fanatic to the core. In
this world of fictional lawyers like Perry Mason (Erle Stanley Gardner)
in books and Ally McBeal on television, I was desperately in search of a
lawyer, a fictional lawyer hailing from India. And yippee, John
Poswall's "The Altar Boys" is the perfect answer to my
desperate search. Call my investigation jingoistic or me a
patrio-chauvinist, but there is something special in reading about an
Indian lawyer in an American courtroom. And, Poswall has done something
in legal thriller writing with the creation of lawyer JJ Singh Rai,
equivalent to what HRF Keating did to police procedurals with the
creation of Inspector Ghote. As the author puts it when times required
"Rai could use his best Punjabi accent and mimic the Peter Sellers
character (the hapless Indian extra actor in Hollywood) of "The
Party."
"The Altar Boys" is Poswall's second work; the first
was another law story, "Lawyers: The Class of '69." I had
read the same--but it was not a thriller per se--and it was one more for
evoking nostalgia, "remembrances of things past," etc. The
said novel, I believe, catered more to the taste of readers having a
background in law. Among the four or five main protagonists of "The
Class of '69," was JJ Singh Rai. But in this new work, Singh
Rai is the unquestioned hero. He is now one of the best lawyers of
America and has taken on some big shots in his career. But the passion
for more has fueled Rai's ambition, and this time round, Rai bites
something more than which he can chew. The defendant in this case is Mr.
Almighty, God Almighty.
Law and religion is a deadly combination. And for those who have
seen Spencer Tracy and Frederick March battle it out as Clarence Darrow
and William Brady respectively in Jerome Lawrence's "Inherit
the Wind," you would know what I mean. When the parents of two
altar boys seek Rai's help about an alleged molestation by the
church priest, Rai sees this as the ultimate challenge. Why not make God
himself the de facto defendant, while the priest would be the de jure
defendant. And more than proving himself worthy of another challenge,
Rai also wants to prove his mettle before his daughter, a law student.
What follows is superb action, courtroom action at its
scintillating best. The author is right at home adding more and more
spice to the drama. As the blurb rightly puts it--"The Altar
Boys" is the book that sets the new standard for courtroom drama.
Absolutely enjoyed the book--reverently enjoyed it.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Midwest Book
Review Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.