books include The Right Wrong Man and The Memory of Judgment. His writing has appeared in leading publications such as Harper’s, The Wall Street Journal, and The Economist. He is a regular contributor to The Times Literary Supplement and The Guardian.
Douglas applied the “Page 99 Test” to his new book, The Criminal State: War, Atrocity, and the Dream of International Justice, and shared the following:
I'm not sure I firmly believe in the Page 99 Test. For one thing, two of my favorite books, Kleist's Michael Kolhaas and Henry James's The Turn of the Screw, would have a hard time passing, given that neither book has a page 99. As a second matter, I'm not a huge Ford Madox Ford fan. I've read The Good Soldier twice, and while I'm all for unreliable narrators, I just don't see all the fuss.Learn more about The Criminal State at the Princeton University Press website.
That said--and even accounting for grade inflation--I think my new book, The Criminal State, handsomely passes. The book offers what I hope readers will find a gripping and highly readable history of the effort to hold state officials criminally responsible for acts of war-making and atrocity. Page 99 comes in a chapter that discusses the drearily failed effort to prosecute Ottoman leaders for the mass killing of their Armenian subjects during the First World War. Still, I might have preferred if Ford Madox Ford had picked page 100 for his test, because that page permits me to punchily challenge the legal principle that all states enjoy equal international rights: "to paraphrase Orwell, it would be more accurate to say: All states are equal, but some states are more equal than others." In any case, I hope readers enjoy all 366 pages--not all of which are devoted to legal failures!
--Marshal Zeringue









