Thursday, October 25, 2012

An excerpt from my new historical fiction book about the electric chair in Sing-Sing prison from 1889 to present day:

From my first victim, a burly man by the name of Slocum, to my last - I never forgot a face.  The smell of electrified flesh, burning hair, low groans and high-pitched squealing, the sudden and forceful evacuation of the bladder and bowels, the violent shuddering – I remember them all.  Securing them by my leather straps at the ankles and the wrists, each person knew sitting in my lap, it would be the last seat they ever took.  It was then that I knew the thankless job of killing would become my charter.  Since then, I never enjoyed stealing a life, but it was my job.  I was built to kill.  Like a lion weeding out the weakness of the heard - my duty was to cleanse the world of the disturbed, the criminally insane, and those who simply could not cope.  I am “The Chair.”


- The Chair, MJ Mancini

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Thanks to Paula Moore of Goodreads.com! Shining review for "Revelation".

At first, when I read the description of this book, I thought it was going to be a Da Vinci Code knockoff. I was pleasantly surprised. This book is filled to the brim with murder, intrigue, and mystery. The characters were wonderfully developed, and the plot was full of the right mixture of action and mystery. I was completely pulled into this story to the point that I could not put it down. The entire time I was reading, I kept thinking, "this would be an amazing movie." I loved it and I can't wait for the next installment.

You can check out her posting here:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/428609948

Friday, October 19, 2012

Paper or Electronic Books?


I used to think it was an age thing, my affinity for holding an actual book in my hands, but my opinion has changed.

Recently, while eating dinner at La Strada in Brick, NJ (best veal dishes in Ocean County), I had the pleasure of meeting two ladies at the table next to us.  They overheard me speaking to my wife about the success of my debut novel, “Revelation” and they wanted to know how to buy it.

Judging a ‘book by its cover’, I estimated their ages in the upper forties to early fifties.  I immediately assumed they would prefer the paperback.  Much to my surprise (pleasantly I might add) they both said they loved their Kindle readers.  I shot a wry look at my wife, who sat with an eager grin on her face while she watched me try to remove my foot from my mouth, and kindly apologized for making assumptions based on age.

In my own defense, I must admit, my personal preference towards holding an actual book may have jaded my judgment.  But, regardless, I decided to begin taking a poll.  My book sells for under $5.00 for the electronic version, and $14.95 for the paperback.  After reviewing the sales figures from last month, it seems clear people prefer the electronic version.  I do not necessarily believe it is a price issue.  Those who like ‘real’ books are accustomed to paying for them.  Not to mention those who are exclusively hardcover readers.  But the quandary still irks me.

My answer is obvious: paperback just feels better in my hands, and perhaps, it makes me feel better about myself.  I just love to look at my bookshelf and see all those good books I read lined up, showing their colorful cracked spines.  It makes me smile, like a job well done.  Somehow, the electronic versions get lost in a sea of ones and zeros.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012


Gravy or Sauce?

Ask any Italian-American to describe what his mother cooks on the stove every Sunday morning, and the answer splits right down the middle.  Is it gravy or sauce?

Growing up in the middle-sixties in the suburb of New York called New Jersey, I never knew there was a way to ‘order’ pizza.  My four-foot-nothing great grandmother brought it up from her cellar every Friday.  The smell of oregano, fresh tomato, and broiled cheese filled her house.

It wasn't until I was sixteen that, to my amazement, I found out people called a phone number and had pizza delivered.  I thought it was a dish of my own family’s creation.  Of course, it was not the kind of pizza I ate at home.  Nor did it have that certain irregular perfection, but for the first time in my life, I realized there were other Italians in America.

When I was six, I wasn't allowed out of my back yard.  At eight I graduated to the front yard.  At ten, I roamed the block like a mad Bedoin looking for goat milk.  It wasn't until I reached the ripe old age of twelve, that I realized the world was bigger than a dead-end street in Brick, New Jersey called “Acapulco Drive’.

Dishes like menesta and beans, cavatelli and broccoli, and ciambotta, were staples on our table.  Black coffee was what my family drank after dinner from tiny white cups.  Anisette was drizzled in it – milk was never an option.  Peppers were always roasted, and chicken soup contained pastina.  Most of us took it for granted.  Now I feel like my heritage is a green-patina tint on a long forgotten past.

When I was sixteen, I came home from school with a bloody nose and a three day sentence in detention.  My mother hit the roof.  She demanded an explanation.  I told her a boy, on the bus, insisted what she cooked for four hours every Sunday morning was ‘sauce’.  I stood my ground.  I adamantly told him it was ‘gravy’.  For that I got a punch in the snoot.  It was the first time I was struck by another person, and the last.  I promised my mother if anyone ever insulted her cooking again, I would strike first, and answer questions later.  Her laugh was both inspirational and confusing.

As a grown man out of college - raising a family - and cooking my own pot of ‘gravy’, I realized the answer.

When someone says, “If it’s red, it’s sauce – gravy is brown,” they are mistaken.  I respond in a kind, but firm voice.  “In cooking, the color brown denotes meat, and meat makes gravy.  Red is a dominant color in food.  Tomatoes are red - therefore whatever they are cooked with becomes red.  But, once meatballs, sausage, braciole, and pork bones are added, ‘tomato sauce’ becomes gravy.

Since the bloody nose in High School, I have come to realize one thing – never insult a mother’s cooking.  But, as an intellectual, I feel compelled to examine the root of a preconceived notion.  The answer is simple:  “When you put meat in it – its gravy.”