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08 October 2015

Blood Stripe: The Susanna Marcasi Chronicles Spotlight!




Fast-Paced Novel or Military Exposé?
Can America Handle the Truth?
WASHINGTON, D.C. – After spending her career as a military historian, defense writer, and publicist, author Gina Maria DiNicolo has just released a double-take thriller of corruption in Congress, scandal in the Pentagon, and a systemic abuse of power that thrusts the Marine Corps into unspeakable acts.

DiNicolo has filled her first work of fiction, Blood Stripe: The Susanna Marcasi Chronicles, with headline fodder: sexual assaults against uniformed women who serve with distinction, U.S.-funded paramilitary outfits fighting for the highest bidder, and the multilevel dysfunction preceding the catastrophic failure of New Orleans levees in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The metaphors speak to serious issues. Violence and sexual themes abound where combat is a constant.
Blood Stripe ignites with reports that a senior Marine officer has killed himself on the Memorial Bridge in Washington, D.C. It burns its way to Susanna Marcasi, an exiled Marine and Naval Academy alum, who battles dark forces to find truth. Her quest leads to a web of corruption and deceit. A physically and emotionally scarred Susanna finds herself toe-to-toe with Manfred Stahl, a retired Marine general, whom a cowering president has crowned defense secretary. Stahl’s unabashed lust for power and emotional instability are eclipsed only by his vile and vindictive nature. Circumstances land the two on the deadly collision course they shared a lifetime earlier.
Sexual tension permeates an often violent backdrop. A risqué yet troubled senator satisfies her voracious need for sex with a Marine whom she summons even during meetings with foreign dignitaries. A megalomaniac with a penchant for South American prostitutes and Argentine tango, works naked in his office. Lost love reappears, but must battle brutal forces to survive. 
Power proves an aphrodisiac to all, revealing an underlying tale of desire, yearning, and love—pure as well as demonic.   
Amazon reviewer John Kelly in his critique of Blood Stripe writes: “Like a literary version of ‘A Few Good Men (and Women)’ on steroids, Gina Maria DiNicolo rips into your emotional core like a ‘kill shot’ from page one and never lets up for 217 pages. This book, not for the weak of heart, tells the story of strength, courage and no mercy in the most elite units of the U.S. Armed Forces.”
Grady Harp, a Top 100 Amazon Hall of Fame Reviewer calls Blood Stripe “One of the most controversial novels of the year. A brilliant thriller, a challenging and courageous novel, one that is headed for awards.”
DiNicolo’s first book, The Black Panthers: A Story of Race, War, and Courage – the 761st Tank Battalion in World War II, (Westholme 2014), is the nonfiction account of the first African American armored unit to see combat duty in World War II.
Reviewers held the narrative in high regard. Publishers Weekly wrote: “… the book really heats up when she writes of the intense, deadly clashes with General Patton's 761st tanks taking on the powerful German Panzer units in snowy forests and French towns. Written with fine detail and in a spirited style, DiNicolo's tribute to The Black Panthers illuminates a fighting armored unit that made both their community and their country proud.”
Blood Stripe: The Susanna Marcasi Chronicles (ISBN 978-0966298604, 2015, St. John’s Press, 290 pages, $15.99) Available on Amazon and everywhere fine books are sold and the author’s website: www.ginamariadinicolo.com/

About Gina Maria DiNicoloBaltimore native Gina Maria DiNicolo graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy with a degree in history and an attraction to the unconventional. She accepted a commission in the U.S. Marine Corps where she worked in aviation, recruiting, history, and public affairs. As a fulltime author and historian, in addition to her two books, DiNicolo has written scores of articles for the Military Officer magazine and other publications. After publishing Blood Stripe, she sought to get her historian game on and accepted a one-year, work/study assignment as a senior writer/editor for the U.S. Army Center of Military History in Washington, D.C., producing studies on military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. She is a dancer specializing in Argentine Tango.
Gina Maria DiNicolo:
Marine Officer,
Military Historian,
Novelist
Born in Baltimore and raised near Annapolis, Md., author Gina Maria DiNicolo graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1984 with a degree in history and an attraction to the unconventional. She accepted a commission in the U.S. Marine Corps, a military career that took her to the remote Solomon Islands to see World War II history firsthand, to New Orleans at a time when crime and corruption careened out of control, as well as Washington, D.C., where everyone has something on someone. Following an early retirement, she went from news editor to defense journalist and occasional muckraker back to historian. After more than a decade, she moved from magazine contributing editor and staff blogger to author.

Her second book, due out Blood Stripe: The Susanna Marcasi Chronicles, is a pulsating thriller about an exiled Marine who must battle dark forces through a maze of intrigue and deceit in her quest for redemption. Though fiction, and somewhat thinly veiled, she pulls from her wild-ride experiences and unique lens. The work is as violent and sexually charged as it is heart-wrenching and unforgettable. 
DiNicolo won the 2008 Gold Award from the American Society of Business Publication Editors for “Building Stability,” a feature article detailing provincial reconstruction teams in Afghanistan. The article appeared in Military Officer magazine where she was a contributing editor for many years. More than 20 of her articles graced its cover.  She was a recent finalist for the Army Historical Foundation Distinguished Writing Award for her first book, The Black Panthers: A Story of Race, War, and Courage – the 761st Tank Battalion in World War II (Westholme 2014)
In this highly acclaimed narrative of the 761st, she tells the story of the first African American armored unit to see combat in World War II. Future baseball great Jackie Robinson served with the unit. The 761st fought under General George Patton against Hitler’s best. One of the unit’s members, Sgt. Ruben Rivers, is one of only seven African Americans to have earned the Medal of Honor for heroism in World War II.
Gina DiNicolo lives in Alexandria, Va., as a fulltime author and historian. She accepted a one-year, work/study assignment as a senior writer/editor for the U.S. Army Center of Military History in Washington, D.C., producing histories on military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. She dances ballroom and specializes in Argentine Tango.
Blood Stripe: The Susanna Marcasi Chronicles by Gina Maria DiNicolo
is now on Amazon 
Selections From Blood Stripe: The Susanna Marcasi Chronicles
  • He had long assumed the Marine Corps would stand as his legacy, as it had his father’s, in part, as well as his grandfather’s. Within days he realized he deplored the Corps as much as the burden of his heritage. In contrast, Susanna, dubious of her choice to shun the Navy, found a home much to her surprise.  Resentment between the two careened out of control.

  • The rains had made the bank treacherous, but Lori saw that only the ground stood between her and Joe. Her lifeless eyes had swollen like the river. But as her tears flowed, her rage welled. She watched as the police made their way across the bridge, cordoned off with yellow “Do Not Cross” tape. Lori had lost her sense of time. Had she arrived an hour ago? Two? She cleaned the mud off her watch. Her twenty minutes there seemed like an eternity.
     
  • Arlington Cemetery rose to a commanding ridge above the Potomac. At the top stood magnificent Arlington House, the home Lee and his family had to abandon because of his choice to fight with the Confederacy at the beginning of the Civil War. Susanna continued her hike, extending her legs with each step. Weeks lay just ahead. Section 5 of the cemetery had an unobstructed view down onto the Memorial Bridge.

  • The affable 18-year-old reminded Bartholomew of his dreams just nine years earlier. Without knowing it, Mike Singleton rescued Ken Bartholomew, who fought his way back from his certain professional grave. The enlightened lieutenant replaced his flag-level drinking with AA meetings, tobacco, and Jesus Christ.  Being born-again did not mean he had to upgrade his vocabulary. In his mind, his colorful word choices brought him closer to the Lord.

  • Mike became agitated, rare as far as Bartholomew knew. “Anything is possible. In fact, there is more evidence that Jimmy Hoffa is buried in the end zone of Giants Stadium than suggesting Earhardt shot himself. Joe? Blow his head off on a bridge? No way. I have known him 20 years. I lived with him for four. He may be a Marine lieutenant colonel, but he is as vain as Miss America.” 

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