Scottoline has a fun style, making lawyering and murder investigation humorous in many ways. Humor, in measured doses, makes any story more readable. Here, a firm of women lawyers accept a 13-year-old genius as their client and set out to exonerate the young man convicted of killing the client's sister five years ago. Much of the humor comes from Mary's personal life, which is infused with Italian food, mothering, food, opinionated elderly Italian neighbors, food, her boyfriend, and food. The book is written in 3rd person, which I prefer, but we stay exclusively with Mary, so pronouns are the only practical difference. As a mystery, the story is moderately interesting with an adequate surprise at the end. Scottoline takes some liberties for writer-convenience, sometimes making Mary, the experienced lawyer, into a nine-year-old who's more naïve than her child client. Well, real murderers don't get away so easily, or plan their crimes so well, so we have to accept some unrealistic actions.