Posts Tagged ‘attorney’
BETRAYED by Lisa Scottoline: Book Review
The new, all-woman Philadelphia law firm of Rosato & DiNuncio is doing well, with an ever-increasing client base. The two partners, Bennie Rosato and Mary DiNuncio, are excited about the new addition to this list, Bendaflex, but the firm’s associate, Judy Carrier, is less than happy.
Bendaflex is a firm that manufactures asbestos, and it has just lost a liabilities case involving hundreds of their former workers. Judy is upset that Bennie has agreed to take on this client, and she’s horrified to learn that she will be the attorney trying the cases, attempting to have Bendaflex pay as little as possible both to the employees who were injured by exposure to the company’s product and to the families of those who died because of it.
In addition, a family medical issue is playing out. Judy has always been extremely close to her mother’s sister, her Aunt Barb, probably closer than she is to her own mother. So she is devastated to learn that her aunt has been diagnosed with stage II breast cancer. Barb has kept her illness from her sister and niece in the hope that chemotherapy would eradicate the cancer cells, but some remain.
Now she has to tell them that she will undergo a mastectomy in two days. Barb’s sister Delia, Judy’s mother, wants to stay in Philadelphia to care for her, but Barb has already arranged for a close friend to help her, and she introduces Judy and Delia to Iris Juarez.
Iris entered the United States illegally from Mexico years ago. The two women met when Iris became the housekeeper when Barb’s husband was ill. They share a love of gardening, and Barb is confident that having Iris stay with her while she’s recuperating is a win-win for everyone; she will pay Iris, who is in a low-paying job, for her time and she will enjoy having Iris’ company and help.
Delia is angry that her sister would prefer Iris to her. Then Iris gets a phone call which obviously upsets her, and she says she needs to leave for work. Several hours later police arrive at Barb’s house with the devastating news that Iris has been found dead in her car, apparently of a heart attack.
Betrayed covers numerous issues that confront the single, professional woman. One is the feeling of being torn in so many directions, as Judy wants to spend time with her aunt but feels enormous pressure to be available for her clients. Second is how to handle the Bendaflex situation, since Bennie is adamant, despite Judy’s protests, about not refusing this work. Third is Judy’s relationship with Frank, a man she cares for and who loves her. She is beginning to wonder if their very different outlooks on and approaches to life can ever be reconciled.
Lisa Scottoline has written books about each member of the law firm, and each novel is a portrait of its protagonist. These women are most definitely not carbon copies of each other; rather, each has a distinctive personality and brings both strengths and weaknesses to the firm and to her own life. Betrayed is a wonderful addition to Ms. Scottoline’s body of work.
You can read more about Lisa Scottoline at this web site.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her web site.
THE BLACK PATH by Asa Larsson: Book Review
In The Black Path, Asa Larsson brings back two of her characters from previous books: police inspector Anna-Maria Mella and attorney Rebecka Martinsson. Up in Tornetrask, northern Sweden, the two are brought together to work on the brutal murder of business executive Inna Wattrang. Her body was found abandoned in an ark, a wooden hut used in ice fishing. Inna was beautiful, intelligent, successful, but someone hated her enough to both torture her and then stab her to death. Why?
Anna-Maria is the head of the homicide force in the small city of Kiruna. She’s happily married, the mother of four children. Rebecka Martinsson is a well-respected attorney in Stockholm, originally from Kiruna, who has just been released from a mental hospital, having suffered a breakdown after seeing the murdered body of a close friend and then being forced to kill three men in self-defense. Now Rebecka wants nothing more than to return to the house in which she grew up and to be left alone. But that is not to be.
Inna’s boss and her brother, his business partner, are brought in to identify her body. Her boss, Mauri Kallis, is a self-made multi-millionaire, a rarity in a country where one’s birth still counts in society. Abandoned by a father he never knew, neglected by a mother with a mental illness, brought up in a foster family with a vicious older foster “brother,” Mauri has tried to put all that behind him by pretending it never happened. Never given love or attention during his childhood, he’s unable to give them to his wife and two young sons. There’s a cold core in his center, and he’s not interested in thawing it out.
All he’s interested in is making money–it’s money, after all, that has given him the clout to build both physical and metaphysical walls between himself and the rest of the world. So far Mauri has had the Midas touch, always knowing when to put money into a business and when to take it out, but with his new mining venture in Uganda, he may be in over his head.
Inna’s brother Diddi has slid through life with his good looks and charming manner, despite his own unhappy upbringing. But his dissolute ways are catching up to him. He’s been a partner with Mauri in their firm–Mauri is Mr. Inside, Diddi is Mr. Outside–but he’s losing his touch with the important, rich people the firm needs in order to continue to make its risky investments.
Can the possible business problems and the cooling personal relationship between her boss and her brother explain why Inna was killed? Are those issues central to her murder or merely peripheral?
There’s a strong friendship building between Anna-Maria and Rebecka, two women who don’t have much in common. Anna-Maria’s life, in her opinion, is just about perfect, giving her both a happy family and professional success. On the other hand, Rebecka’s demons, brought about in great part by a neglectful mother (they’re everywhere in this novel), have made her successful in work but fearful in her personal life. Attracted to a colleague in her Stockholm law firm, she’s convinced herself that she’s not worthy of his attention, much less his love, and is almost suicidal in her despair at ever finding someone with whom to share her life.
A wonderful character study as well as an engrossing, if very dark, novel, Asa Larsson’s series continues to bring northern Sweden closer to us.
Ms. Larsson doesn’t appear to have an English web page, but you can read more about her at this web page.