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The Organ Grinder And The Monkey Paperback – May 13, 2008
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From Steubenville, Ohio (Petrillo) to Boardman, Ohio (Powers), to Brookline, Massachusetts (Hanhart) - the three protagonist´s imaginative and individual experiences are detailed. From humorous to outrageous to tragic, the reader is taken on a journey that finds its ending in New York City. The Organ Grinder and the Monkey is a highly original and complex novel.
Sam Moffie´s never ending imagination is once again hard at work.
The Organ Grinder and the Monkey was just named a finalist in visionary fiction 2008 USA best book awards.
- Print length370 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateMay 13, 2008
- Dimensions6 x 0.93 x 9 inches
- ISBN-10143632775X
- ISBN-13978-1436327756
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Product details
- Publisher : Xlibris; First Edition (May 13, 2008)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 370 pages
- ISBN-10 : 143632775X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1436327756
- Item Weight : 1.2 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.93 x 9 inches
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Sam Moffie has just finished his sixth novel "Requiem for a Casanova" which on its way to Kindle Scout. Sam lives in Poland Village, Ohio with his wife Juliette, their two dogs, one cat and lots of wine.
Sam's fifth novel "To Kill the Duke,"
has won numerous awards (like his other books). Glad I Thought of It Productions, founded by film producer Archie Gips (Wahlburgers), has already optioned the book for a movie.
The novel is a carefully woven escapade that brings together the elite Russian spy squad of Mr. Zavert, Boris Gila, Alexei Aleksandra and Ivan Viznapu as they start on a dangerous mission that brings them into contact with the gangsters Mickey Cohen and Johnny Stompanato, the billionaire Howard Hughes, the producer/director Dick Powell, the actress Susan Hayward, countless others, and of course the big man himself--John Wayne.
In addition, one of the worst films ever made, "The Conqueror," and the sand it was filmed on, play prominent roles in the novel. Shot near St. George, Utah, the cast and crew were unaware of the life-and-death risks involved in filming on ground laden with radioactivity from the nuclear tests done downwind in Nevada. In addition, Howard Hughes had 60 tons of the uniquely colored sand sent back to RKO for post-production shots, and to this day no one knows exactly what happened to it. At least 91 of the 220 cast and crew members developed cancer after filming. Forty-six died, including John Wayne, Susan Hayward, Pedro Armendáriz (who shot himself soon after learning he had terminal cancer), Agnes Moorehead, John Hoyt and director Dick Powell.
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2010I found this book unsettling, not in my comfort zone, although I can see there is humor, angst, poverty, imagination, unique characters, believability and hope. The story is mostly either in conversation or thoughts, Although I found the one-liners by Constance got tired very quickly, it seemed right. I loved the comical efforts to keep the memory of Dean Martin alive, Seymour's father's obsession. Seymour's Italian parents are divorced, his father gay and his mother fixated by the fact. It is very uncomfortable for him as a child to have overnight visits with his father, and yet daytime visits run fairly smoothly. The scene in which the character of Seymour is traumatized was difficult for me to read.
What I liked about the book was the building and shaping of the three main characters, Seymour, Irving, and Constance, from their struggling beginnings in the small, decrepit towns of Ohio and Massachusetts, to their lives in New York. The connection between Seymour and his "Papa" (grandfather) is a great comfort to this young impressionable boy, and a steadying influence for him. From him, Seymour became well-versed in the history of the town. With a chance to get away from Steubenville with an inheritance, Seymour's goal is to become a veterinarian, for which he has a special talent.
Irving, the son of radicals, mother Jewish and father Irish, gets assistance from a policeman in his old town, and decides to set his goal on being the "best cop in New York", a handsome goal that certainly has it's pitfalls in a world of corruption, but as a person who believes everything is a conspiracy, he has a better chance at keeping clean than most. Constance's ambition from her earliest days is to be a dancer with the Rockettes. Constance, raised by her mother alone, is both talented and beautiful. Her beauty plays against her in New York. These three innocents have never been out of their small towns before.
All three of our unlikely protagonists are very different with simply small town life and college as their connection. The novel is complex, informative, and shows us a slice of life that is almost impossible to overcome. Sam Moffie is definitely an exceptional author with his own style. Events throughout the book will take the reader through hilarity, tragedy, and determination against the odds.
Even the therapist is not altruistic, she is expecting to get a best-selling book out of her sessions with Seymour. He has now been diagnosed with split personality. Complications and changes soon begin moving thick and fast. Irving attends Al-Anon as well as therapy, trying to deal with his drug and alcohol addicted wife. Constance has everything she needs to be a Rockette and/or stand-out actress, but with no resume, she is now the victim of playing small parts off-off Broadway, and full-time dancer at the strip-club, S.T.R.I.P. It is hard not to become involved in the lives of these characters, a sign of a good author. This is definitely not a "feel-good" book but the intricacy and readers' fascination with every aspect of life, it is one of the best of its type. The book is intense, raw, with acts of deviant sexual extremes, and politically incorrect; shocking yet insightful. It speaks to a time of corruption, desperation, and victims of circumstance.
The characters, their dreams, their trials, their achievements all stand up to the test. The changes in Seymour's life midway through the book, build the story to the final outcome, as the story's focus speeds up. Interestingly, it seems at this point much like a thriller with cheat sheets, the reader knows who, but the characters don't. Few people other than the therapist come out ahead. "The Organ Grinder and The Monkey" was a "Best Books, USA Book News" Award Finalist. In the version I read, there are some Reading Group Questions and Topics for Discussions in the back.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2017When a puzzling, horrifying crime is committed, society demands its curiosity is quenched by an explanation of the often inexplicable. A researching psychiatrist attempts to do just this, analysing the dysfunctional childhoods of the perpetrator, the victim and the law enforcer in the Rust Belt of the USA.
In this unique novel we follow these three main characters through the successes, failures and banalities of life until they converge, by chance, in New York City and set the scene for their deadly reunion. Written in a droll style the author manages to encapsulate cynicism, optimism and an ever present tinge of darkness.
This highly recommended page-turner will keep you reading when you know you should turn off the light!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2012The Organ Grinder and the Monkey has a lot going on. It is a busy story in the lives of three very different people. Seymour Petrillo, from Steubenville, Ohio, grows up in an Italian family who has enough problems to be a soap opera in itself. The one rock in his life and who he looks up to as a family figurehead is his grandfather Carmen Antonucci. Constance Powers' family came from a fortune that had trickled away through the generations by the time she came along. Money and joining the Rockettes are her strongest desires in life. She will do anything to achieve her dreams. Officer Irving Hanhart, a learner of life lessons, shares a great deal of advice as he protects the streets of New York City. Determined to find the answers he hangs onto a lead in his criminal cases and won't let go.
Author Sam Moffie weaves us an intriguing tale as these three people grow up in a humorous maze of love, lust, and murder. The book is filled with great dialog, bits of trivia from old movies, and really good bands from decades past. Even Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis have a bit part in this story. If you enjoy a fun read with a lot of detail to puzzle out, then take some time to join Seymour, Constance, and Irving in The Organ Grinder and the Monkey.
This complimentary book was provided to me by the author through [...]
