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Slip and Fall [Paperback]

Nick Santora
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Book Description

26 April 2012
Robert Principe thought it would be a one-time deal.

When he graduated from law school, Rob believed his future was set. But the white-collar world isn't as easy as he thought, and with a struggling firm, a pregnant wife and a sister in trouble he needs money... fast.

Desperate, he approaches his mobster cousin Jackie with an insurance scam, a chance for Robert to use his law degree to make a few quick bucks. The scheme works - too well. The money flows, the violence escalates, and Rob soon learns that getting out of a deal with the Mafia isn't exactly easy...

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Product details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Mulholland Books (26 April 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1444733869
  • ISBN-13: 978-1444733860
  • Product Dimensions: 13 x 19.7 x 2.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,698,150 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

Nick Santora's characters will ensnare readers and pull them into the good, bad, and ugly of Robert Principe's life - a gripping thriller (Vince Flynn)

A thriller with quick pacing and vivid imagery that will catapult readers into a page-turning adventure...fans of Prison Break will appreciate the heart and soul that underlies the gut-wrenching plot (Bookreporter.com)

About the Author

Nick Santora has written and/or produced for several television series such as The Sopranos, Law & Order and The Guardian. He was the writer/co-executive producer of the hit dramas Prison Break and Breakout Kings.



Visit his website at www.nicksantora.com, or follow him on Twitter @nicksantora.


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent 18 Mar 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
The author has an engaging style and is very easy to read. The predicament that the main character finds himself in is well described.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Sliding expectations 27 July 2012
Format:Paperback
I wrote this review for the Crime Fiction Lover website -

Creative writing courses consistently tell their charges to write what you know. Nick Santora used to be a lawyer. Hopefully he's never been a Mafioso, but after a career change he became a screenwriter on shows like The Sopranos and Prison Break. So his first novel, about a lawyer who gets entangled in the mob, certainly deals with subjects he knows.

Rob Principe is the protagonist. With a degree from Columbia, the prestigious university in New York, rather than going into a legal department on Wall Street he decides to set up in Bensonhurst, a working class district of Brooklyn. Principe is nothing if not principled. His practise fights the corner of the common people - those who slip in the supermarket, fall from scaffolding, or die too soon because of medical negligence.

Far from the six figures his Ive League classmates are earning, he's three months behind on his mortgage, his wife is expecting, and his sister's on hard times. His second cousin Jackie Masalla is a bagman for local mobster Big Lou Turro (BLT), and Principe hatches a scheme. Instead of Jackie whacking people who don't pay their debts to BLT, why don't they fake injuries on mob-run building sites then clean up in damages against the construction companies.

It works well but Rob Principe gets cold feet. Jackie, BLT, and the rest of the crew don't take `no' for an answer. As the story continues Principe is in a fight for his life against these deadly foes, and wrestling with the guilt of lying to his wife and family to boot.

The book reads very well - perfect for the plane or beach - and the story moves quickly. Santora's dialogue is clear and direct, and with Principe narrating his story there's plenty of clever observation and humour. He touches on themes like familial relationships, and the Italian American experience. At one point Principe's buddy talks about how his grandfather changed his name so as not to be lumped in with the mobsters, whose names all end in a vowel.

That's about as deep as it goes, unfortunately. Slip & Fall is entertaining and has the right amount of action and violence. However, it's also rather predictable. The gangsters are a touch clichéd, and the narrative uses exaggeration and superlatives all the way through. He totally loves his wife, is as low as it's possible to be, and 100 per cent hates what he's done. It jars after a while.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars  38 reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars At first slowly, then quickly 1 July 2007
By Michael P. Maslanka - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
So they say about going broke, and so this fine novel says about losing your ethical compass. Robert Principe is a good man and an honest lawyer. But when he is put to the test, when he has to make a decision compelled by family issues, he makes the wrong choice, his need for a few bucks overriding his better instincts. He thinks "just once" and I am out. Not true. The lawyer envy he feels(put in any profession) for those half as smart and twice as successful is perfectly captured by Santora, a lawyer turned writer. And the way the legal system works, and how it is easy to game it for illegal profit, is nailed as well. The long suffering wife is a bit too patient and saintly, and the violence(Robert hatches his insurance bilking scheme with some local wise guys) is ,I imagine, honest but may put off a few readers(the clerk at my local bookstore thought it a bit much). But this first novel by a Sopranos writer and creator of Prison Break is worth the time.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent summer read 8 July 2007
By Rebecca - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Nick Santora gave up the practice of law to pursue his lifelong dream of writing. And it is a good thing he did. He is currently the executive producer and writer of the hit TV series, Prison Break. Slip and Fall is his first novel.
Robert Principe is a lawyer. He is also the apple of his father's eye, the toast of the family and the envy of the neighborhood. Robert is the good Italian-American, hard-working, smart, and honest. What his family and friends do not know is that Robert's law firm and life are circling the drain. Out of desperation, he comes up with "the plan". Enter Lou Turro and Jackie Masella, the other side of the Italian-American coin--The Mob. They help Robert execute his plan. The plan is a success. Lou is a little richer and Jackie has gained some respect from Lou. Robert's financial stresses have eased and his business is picking up. His life seems to have taken a turn for the better. But Robert's not aware of what's happening behind the scenes and that lack of knowledge may get him and his family killed.
If you think this book is all drama and angst, forget it. This is the perfect book for summer reading. Just kick back and enjoy the thrill ride. There is no moral here, just a good story about likeable people. Nick Santora has infused his work with a great sense of humor and the characters come across as real, passionate human beings, with the emphasis on human. Hopefully, we'll see some more literature by Mr. Santora; meanwhile we'll just have to enjoy his work on Prison Break.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Strong writing weakened by flat characters 21 July 2007
By booksforabuck - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Rob Principe graduated at the top of his Columbia Law School class and decided to go into business for himself, representing those injured by careless corporations and slipshod equipment. Unfortunately for Rob, the business doesn't exactly roll in. When his banker starts demanding mortgage payments, his wife announces she is pregnant, and his sister is dumped by her husband--and pregnant with a Downs syndrome baby, Principe is desperate. A chance run-in with his gangster cousin gives him an idea, a win-win. Too many people can't pay what they owe the gangsters for gambling debt. Rather than killing the deadbeats, the mob could have them fake a work injury and send to Rob. Rob would sue, keep his cut, and the mob would get the deadbeat's share. Even the deadbeats win--since they're not killed. It's rough for Rob to sacrifice his morals like that, but he manages.

Getting in bed with the mob has its challenges, though, and Rob soon finds he is in deeper than he'd imagined. Getting out, though, won't be easy. Concerns about ethics soon take second place to staying alive.

Author Nick Santora's prose keeps the pages turning, with Rob continually faced with dilemmas that offer no easy way out.

Several flaws keep SLIP AND FALL from reaching its full potential. First, Rob's financial issues might have been serious, but he was a top graduate from a top law school. Surely he could have taken a job with a major law firm rather than joined up with the mob. Second, it was hard to sympathize too much with Rob once the mob let him off the hook and he voluntarily went back to them. Third, I found the resolution fine for Rob, but not very satisfactory in terms of justice or lessons learned. Finally, the characters were mostly flat--dad proud, wife nagging, sister whining, cousin Joey manic-depressive, and Lou Turro channeling Marlon Brando.

SLIP AND FALL shows plenty of promise for Nick Santora and makes a quick airplane read. It could have been a lot better, though.
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