The protagonist of these "parables of the law" - the mind through which the challenge of justice is presented - is Eric Blair, the birth name of George Orwell. What might seem, at first glance, a curious strategy - to present contemporary problems by building on the persona of a great political polemicist - prove to be a stroke of brilliance. Some things are best seen out of the corner of the eye; some problems taken head on prove insoluble; here parables of the past speak to the present as direct analysis never could. Set in Burma in the 1920s, these parables wrestle with a series of challenging issues: capital punishment, insanity and criminal responsiblility, child custody, the suicidal ex-lover, parental neglect of a child unto death, the "battered wife syndrome, " and heroin to treat terminal cancer, to name a few.
Written by one of America's foremost experts on crime and punishment, "The Brothel Boy" offers readers a deeper understanding of these poignant debates, and a profound respect for the intricacies of justice.