>> i am ecstatic. >> reporter: dr. huld share that emotion, if his results would stop this raging, uncontrolled epidemic. for the pbs newshour, i'm miles o'brien in boston. >> woodruff: now, a best-selling novelist takes on war crimes. jeffrey brown has our latest addition to the "newshour bookshelf." >> brown: in 2004, 400 people were rounded up from their homes in a village in bosnia, and buried alive in an old coal mine. but, did this mass killing really happen? and if so, who were the perpetrators? those questions must be decided at the international criminal court in the netherlands. it's the setting for a new legal thriller titled, "testimony" and a new setting for acclaimed author scott turow, the attorney and writer whose work has sold more than 30 million copies since his debut novel, "presumed innocent." i'm not going to name all the other best-sellers, but it's nice to talk to you here. >> jeff, it's nice to talk to you. >> brown: you have left behind the fictional kindle county, the setting that many of us are