Killer Smile: A Rosato & Assoicates Novel
With her trademark wit and style, New York Times bestselling author Lisa Scottoline delivers yet another blockbuster thriller

With the halfhearted okay of her boss at the boutique Philly firm of Rosato & Associates, insecure young lawyer Mary DiNunzio takes on a pro bono case—which is Latin for not paying squat. What’s more, the client is dead and the case is half a century old, involving an Italian fisherman interned at a camp in Montana during World War II.

Mary wants to prove herself, but she ends up drowning in documents—and a lost cause. Add to that a colleague who keeps fixing her up with blind dates from hell. But things suddenly heat up when people Mary has interviewed start dropping dead. And Mary suspects she’s being followed. Soon she’s on the run for her life.

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Killer Smile: A Rosato & Assoicates Novel
With her trademark wit and style, New York Times bestselling author Lisa Scottoline delivers yet another blockbuster thriller

With the halfhearted okay of her boss at the boutique Philly firm of Rosato & Associates, insecure young lawyer Mary DiNunzio takes on a pro bono case—which is Latin for not paying squat. What’s more, the client is dead and the case is half a century old, involving an Italian fisherman interned at a camp in Montana during World War II.

Mary wants to prove herself, but she ends up drowning in documents—and a lost cause. Add to that a colleague who keeps fixing her up with blind dates from hell. But things suddenly heat up when people Mary has interviewed start dropping dead. And Mary suspects she’s being followed. Soon she’s on the run for her life.

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Killer Smile: A Rosato & Assoicates Novel

Killer Smile: A Rosato & Assoicates Novel

by Lisa Scottoline
Killer Smile: A Rosato & Assoicates Novel

Killer Smile: A Rosato & Assoicates Novel

by Lisa Scottoline

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Overview

With her trademark wit and style, New York Times bestselling author Lisa Scottoline delivers yet another blockbuster thriller

With the halfhearted okay of her boss at the boutique Philly firm of Rosato & Associates, insecure young lawyer Mary DiNunzio takes on a pro bono case—which is Latin for not paying squat. What’s more, the client is dead and the case is half a century old, involving an Italian fisherman interned at a camp in Montana during World War II.

Mary wants to prove herself, but she ends up drowning in documents—and a lost cause. Add to that a colleague who keeps fixing her up with blind dates from hell. But things suddenly heat up when people Mary has interviewed start dropping dead. And Mary suspects she’s being followed. Soon she’s on the run for her life.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780063031111
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 10/27/2020
Series: Rosato & Associates Series , #9
Pages: 432
Sales rank: 316,640
Product dimensions: 7.90(w) x 5.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

About The Author
Lisa Scottoline is a #1 bestselling and award-winning author of more than thirty-two novels. She also co-authors a bestselling non-fiction humor series with her daughter, Francesca Serritella. There are more than thirty million copies of Lisa's books in print in more than thirty-five countries. She lives in Pennsylvania with an array of disobedient but adorable pets.

Hometown:

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Date of Birth:

July 1, 1955

Place of Birth:

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Education:

B.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1976; J.D., University of Pennsylvania Law School, 1981

Read an Excerpt

Killer Smile


By Scottoline, Lisa

HarperCollins Publishers

ISBN: 0060514957

Chapter One

"Rosato & Associates," Mary DiNunzio said into the receiver, then kicked herself for answering the phone. The caller was Premenstrual Tom, a man who wanted to sue the Philadelphia Police Department, the United States Congress, and a local cantaloupe. He'd been calling the office at all hours, and Mary felt sorry for him. He was obviously off his meds and had reached one of the few lawyers in the city who wouldn't sue fruit.

"This is Mr. Thomas Cott!" he shouted. "Who's this?"

"I'm Mary DiNunzio. We spoke yesterday -- "

"Get me Ms. Benedetta Rosato!"

"Ms. Rosato is gone for the day, sir." Mary checked her watch. 10:16 P.M. Everyone had gone home hours ago, and until now, the offices had been blessedly quiet. "The office is closed."

"Then what are you doing there, Ms. Mary DiNunzio?"

Good question, Mr. Thomas Cott. Mary was working late again, reading until her brown eyes turned red and her contacts dried to the crispness of breakfast cereal. Documents blanketed the conference table like a legal snowstorm, and her compact figure had been curled into the swivel chair for so long she felt like a meatball. "Mr. Cott, I'll take a message and tell Bennie -- "

"I refuse to leave any more messages! Get Ms. Benedetta Rosato on the line! I demand to know why she won't represent me! She specializes in constitutional rights, it says so on the computer!"

"The computer?"

"In the library! The website, your website! It says it right there! That's false advertising! What about my constitutional rights? They don't matter? I don't matter?"

"Mr. Cott, no lawyer can take every case," Mary answered, then hesitated. Bennie had told the associates not to engage Premenstrual Tom, but if she could explain it to him, maybe he'd stop calling. "I think Bennie told you she didn't think your case could prevail in court. She's practiced constitutional law for a long time and has excellent judgment, so -- "

"All those judges are in on it! All of them are crooked, every single one of them! City Hall is a pit of conspiracy and corruption! They're all in the mayor's pocket!"

"Mr. Cott, the judges in City Hall aren't crooked, and your case would be in federal court anyway -- "

"You're not fooling me, either of you! Put Ms. Benedetta Rosato on the telephone right now! I know she's there! She must be, she's not at home!"

Mary blinked. "How do you know she's -- "

"I went to her house! I knocked on her door, I waited for her to answer! The windows were dark!"

Mary stiffened. "How did you get her address?"

"It's in the phone book, I looked it up! What do you think I am, incapable? I may not have a fancy law degree, but I am not incapable, MS. MARY DiNUNZIO!"

Mary suddenly stopped feeling sorry for him. He was shouting louder now, almost screaming.

"I SAID, get MS. BENEDETTA ROSATO on this telephone RIGHT NOW! I KNOW she's right there with you!"

"Mr. Cott, if you'll just -- "

"DON'T LIE TO ME! Don't you DARE LIE TO ME!"

"Mr. Cott, I'm not -- "

"I'll come down there, you LYING WHORE! I'll come down there and SHOOT -- "

Mary hung up, shaken. The conference room fell abruptly silent. The air felt charged. It took her a moment to process what had just happened. Okay, Premenstrual Tom had morphed into Psychotic Tom, and it wasn't funny anymore. Bennie was at an ACLU dinner, but it would be ending soon. She could be going home. Mary had to warn her. She reached for the phone to call the boss's cell.

Rring, rrriiinng! The phone rang underneath Mary's hand, jarring her. Rrrriiinng! She gritted her teeth and let it ring twice more so voicemail would pick up. She should never have engaged Premenstrual Tom. When would she learn? Her goodgirl reflexes -- Help Out, Be Nice, Tell the Truth -- sucked in the practice of law.

Mary pushed the button for her direct phone line and called Bennie, but there was no answer. She left a detailed message, then hung up, uneasy. She'd call her back in five minutes to make sure the boss had gotten the message.

Mary eased back in her swivel chair, wishing suddenly that she weren't alone in the office. She eyed the doorway to the conference room, surprised to find the threshold dark. Who turned out the lights in the reception area? Maybe the cleaning people, when they'd left.

I'll come down there and shoot

Mary eyed the phone, daring it to ring again. She didn't leave it off the hook because the drill was to record threatening messages for evidence, in case the office had to go for a restraining order, like with Premenstrual Fred. Mary wondered fleetingly if she could find a career that didn't attract garden variety homicidal rage or bad television commercials.

She told herself to get over it. Premenstrual Tom had been blowing off steam, and there was a security desk in the lobby of the building. The guard wouldn't let anybody upstairs without calling her first, especially after business hours, and nowadays you couldn't get past the desk without a driver's license and a mortgage note.

She got back to work, tucking a dark blonde tendril into its loose French twist, and picking up the document she'd been reading. It was a letter dated December 17, 1941, from the provost marshal general's office, a federal agency that no longer existed. Its type was grainy because it was a Xerox copy of a photocopy of a carbon copy, and on another night, Mary would have gotten a charge out of its vintage. Everybody in the office called her case the History Channel, but she loved the History Channel. Mary loved mostly everything on cable except The Actor's Studio, which she wouldn't watch at gunpoint. But she didn't want to think about gunpoint right now ...

Continues...

Excerpted from Killer Smile by Scottoline, Lisa Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Interviews

Ransom Notes Interview with Lisa Scottoline

Ransom Notes: What was the genesis of Killer Smile?

Lisa Scottoline: The idea for Killer Smile came about when I learned that my grandparents had been compelled to register as enemy aliens during World War II, because they were born in Italy. This was true even though they had lived in Philadelphia for 30 years and offered up their son, my father, to the U.S. Air Force. I was so fascinated by the connection between war and civil liberties that I decided to write this book. In Killer Smile, Mary DiNunzio is investigating a suspicious suicide that took place in an Italian-American internment camp some 60 years ago. There's not any of that cool C.S.I. stuff to solve this kind of puzzle. Instead, Mary has to use wit, research, and logical reasoning, blended with a lot of heart.

RN: How does Mary fit with the other women working for Bennie Rosato?

LS: Their backgrounds and personalities may differ, but what I hope they all share is great wit, guts, and a sharp legal intellect. They're also way hot. (My variation on writing what you know is writing what you'd love to know!) My own background is most like Mary's -- I'm short (for Mary I always say "compact"), and I'm a Penn grad, a decent trial lawyer, and almost unreasonably rooted to my hometown, Philadelphia. I really love Mary. Her greatest obstacles are often her own good manners and insecurities. And she doesn't get over things easy. Death hits home for her. There's an Italian proverb that translates to: Great griefs are mute. That's Mary.

RN: What do Mary's connections to her family add to Killer Smile?

LS: My trade secret -- heretofore untold -- is to make readers know and love my main characters. You know somebody better if you meet their parents. So meeting Mary's parents helps you love her more, and helps me keep the pages turning. But, at the same time, in this book, we see that the ties that bind can actually be binding. Mary is way too involved with her family. Everybody has to change and move on, and find a way to love each other just the same. Just like life.

RN: Can you tell us anything about your future plans?

LS: The book after Killer Smile is completely different -- a stand-alone thriller about a woman U.S. attorney. It's grittier than what I've done in the Rosato & Associates books, which I will definitely go back to. Killer Smile was such a deeply emotional book for me -- driven by that discovery about my grandparents and also some ghosts in my own life -- that I needed to try something completely different. But don't pass up Killer Smile. I was born to write Killer Smile.

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