Producing quality films
For an overview of Morcan Motion Pictures click on:
http://www.imdb.com/company/co0239052/ or http://pro.imdb.com/company/co0239052/
or go to:
Producing quality films
For an overview of Morcan Motion Pictures click on:
http://www.imdb.com/company/co0239052/ or http://pro.imdb.com/company/co0239052/
or go to:
Prologue
An old vagrant hummed tunelessly to himself as he warmed his bony hands over a fire he’d lit minutes earlier in a drum long since blackened by perhaps a hundred such fires. Certainly more fires than he, or any of his street cronies, could remember. He stopped humming when, across a busy thoroughfare, a gravel-voiced busker began reciting poetry.
“Stormy, husky, brawling,” the busker rumbled. “City of the big shoulders.” He was reciting verse from the works of hometown poet-made-good, Carl Sandburg. The poem was appropriately titled Chicago. “Come and show me another city with lifted head singing so proud to be alive and coarse and strong and cunning.” The busker, a long-haired Vietnam veteran whose only concession to his military past was his VSM service medal which he still wore with pride, looked directly at the old vagrant opposite.
The vagrant imagined the busker smiled at him, though he couldn’t be sure in the fading early evening light. Even so, he flashed a toothless grin in the other’s direction.
Soon, the old man was joined by half a dozen street pals. All homeless like him, they appeared like disheveled ghosts out of the shadows, attracted partly by the warmth of the fire and partly by the busker. They listened intently to the poet’s words that flowed effortlessly from the busker’s mouth. Words that painted images so vivid in their minds it was as if the men were watching a kaleidoscope of their own youth.
“Under the smoke, dust all over his mouth, laughing with white teeth,” the busker continued. “Under the terrible burden of destiny laughing as a young man laughs.”
Several passersby paused to listen, but none bothered to drop a donation into the hat that lay at the busker’s feet. Finally, as the busker finished his recital, a business executive threw a quarter into the hat without breaking stride. Encouraged, the busker launched into another Sandberg poem.
Listening to the busker delivering further verses about his beloved Windy City, the old vagrant couldn’t help but note the irony: there wasn’t a breath of wind on this still Chicago evening.
For the full prologue and first few chapters of The Orphan Factory go to:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M9WWKW/
or click on the image below:

Susan M. Heim, author and editor of the bestselling “Chicken Soup for the Soul” series has this to say in her review of Fiji: A Novel….
Excerpt from Chapter 6 of The Ninth Orphan (The Orphan Trilogy, #1):
….Few knew more about Yamashita’s Gold than Naylor did. His own father had served in the Philippines under General MacArthur and, at the end of World War Two, had witnessed the earliest discoveries of Japan’s massive plunder.
Naylor had also confirmed that the former president of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos, had obtained much of his personal fortune from later discoveries.
He knew Japan had gained enormous wealth when it invaded China and a dozen or so other Asian countries during the Second World War. The Japanese looted bullion by the truckload.
In addition to the incalculable amounts of gold, gigantic quantities of diamonds, silver and religious artifacts had also been stolen. These colossal treasure troves were shipped to the Philippines in preparation for transportation to Japan. However, as the war in the Pacific intensified, the ever-increasing presence of Allied ships made the transport of such treasure problematic for Japan. As a result, much of it was hidden in the Philippines….
Want to know more? Read The Ninth Orphan or take a look at this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHkla6IseQc&list=UUkx4GYl5APh59k9VI868kxg&index=3&feature=plcp
A real-life Manchurian Candidate. Mind-controlled assassins. A mind control initiative sanctioned at the highest level….
Sounds implausible? Read The Ninth Orphan…or watch this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fml1Z5saLH0&list=UUkx4GYl5APh59k9VI868kxg&index=1&feature=plcp![]()
The Ninth Orphan is available as a Trade Paperback on Createspace and Amazon. It’s also available as an ebook via Amazon.
http://www.amazon.com/Ninth-Orphan-James-Morcan/dp/0473193132/
https://www.createspace.com/3642008
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0056I4FKC
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0056I4FKC
What do Bill Clinton, David Rockefeller, Prince Charles, Bill Gates, Ben Bernanke, Google Chairman Eric Schmidt and Facebook Co-founder Chris Hughes have in common? Read The Ninth Orphan to find out…or watch this video… http://www.youtube.com/user/SterlingGateBooks
Amazon links to The Ninth Orphan:
http://veracityvoice.com/?p=12602
Check out this article on The Ninth Orphan
Link
—
Posted: August 12, 2012 in The Ninth Orphan
Tags: action, action adventure, action and adventure, action thriller, adventure, Bilderberg, conspiracy theories, conspiracy thriller, contemporary fiction, contemporary romance, fiction, international thriller, jack reacher, james morcan, jason bourne, kindle, mens adventure, mk ultra, mystery, novel, spy, spy mystery, spy thriller, the ninth orphan, the orphan trilogy, thriller, yamashita, yamashitas gold
An orphan grows up to become an assassin for a highly secretive organization. When he tries to break free and live a normal life, he is hunted by his mentor and father figure, and by a female orphan he spent his childhood with. On the run, the mysterious man’s life becomes entwined with his beautiful French-African hostage and a shocking past riddled with the darkest of conspiracies is revealed.
Fast-paced, totally fresh and original, filled with deep and complex characters, The Ninth Orphan is a high-octane thriller with an edge. Merging fact with fiction, it fits the current trend toward stories about shadow organizations rumored to exist in the real world.
Tackling genetic selection, mind control, secret societies and a chase around the globe, The Ninth Orphan has intimate character portraits usually associated with psychological novels. It also has a poignant, romantic sub-plot which means it appeals equally to males and females of all ages.
Kentbridge felt bored as he half-listened to a speech by the US President being televised on a monitor set into the back of the seat in front. Such was Kentbridge’s disdain for politicians, he didn’t even bother to look at the screen.
Contrary to the media circus which portrayed politicians as all-powerful figures, Kentbridge knew from experience the vast majority of US Government officials – elected or otherwise – were puppets who only had the illusion of power. This included Presidents. These public figures all understood the game and were happy to go through the motions, carrying out orders that came from above – from the likes of the Omega Agency – so they could fulfill their own egotistical ambitions.
Although political parties often seemed poles apart, in reality they all bowed to this higher order of power. Kentbridge had long since understood Democrats and Republicans were essentially the same party with different faces and that was why, no matter how many promises each leader made, significant change rarely transpired.
Consequently, Kentbridge had never voted in his life. Certainly there were obvious differences in policies between the various leaders, and an America run by a Bush, an Obama, a Clinton or a Palin, would have distinct contrasts.
Those variables didn’t concern the secret elite rulers, however. As long as the Omega Agency and other clandestine groups ensured each administration sold out on the most lucrative issues – oil, banking, drug trafficking, arms sales – they couldn’t care less whether a political party poured a few more measly bucks into healthcare or schools.
Kentbridge switched the television off and focused his mind on Nine. He hoped the man in Paris was indeed the rogue orphan.
★★★★★ “Action-packed and very well written” –Have You Heard Book Review
★★★★ “A Cloak and Dagger Grand Prix” –The Kindle Book Review
★★★★★ “A fantastic spy thriller” –A Made Up Story Book Reviews
★★★★★ “Every twist and turn that you can imagine” –Holy Smoley Book Review