Posts Tagged ‘young adult’

Goodreads.com – the world’s leading site for books, readers and reviewers – has some amazing lists.

Here’s its Top 100 list for ‘Great coming-of-age books’: http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/3713.Great_Coming_Of_Age_Books#

And here’s the Top 10 (below) as at 9 October 2012 PST:

1 The Orphan Factory (The Orp... The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)
by James Morcan
4.6 of 5 stars4.60 avg rating — 35 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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2 The Catcher in the Rye The Catcher in the Rye
by J.D. Salinger
3.75 of 5 stars3.75 avg rating — 883,250 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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3 To Kill a Mockingbird To Kill a Mockingbird
by Harper Lee
4.21 of 5 stars4.21 avg rating — 1,194,930 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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4 Great Expectations Great Expectations
by Charles Dickens
3.64 of 5 stars3.64 avg rating — 177,415 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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5 Jane Eyre Jane Eyre
by Charlotte Brontë
4.05 of 5 stars4.05 avg rating — 517,486 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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6 The Adventures of Huckleber... The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
by Mark Twain
3.75 of 5 stars3.75 avg rating — 605,412 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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7 Are You There God? It's Me,... Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret
by Judy Blume
3.86 of 5 stars3.86 avg rating — 72,491 ratings

My rating:

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8 Anne of Green Gables (Anne ... Anne of Green Gables (Anne of Green Gables, #1)
by L.M. Montgomery
4.21 of 5 stars4.21 avg rating — 200,602 ratings

My rating:

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9 Little Women Little Women
by Louisa May Alcott
3.95 of 5 stars3.95 avg rating — 605,241 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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10 Harriet the Spy Harriet the Spy
by Louise Fitzhugh
3.97 of 5 stars3.97 avg rating — 33,541 ratings

My rating:

didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing

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(Points are based on the ranking of the book on each list and the number of people have voted for it. A book’s “score” is the total).

Here’s the latest review to appear on Amazon for our top rated coming-of-age spy thriller The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2):

★★★★★Phenomenal series,  October 7, 2012

By JWinsteadSee all my reviews

This review is from: The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2) (Kindle Edition)

I loved this book and this series has me hooked…they are both great reads. I cannot wait until the third instalment. If you are looking for a good espionage type thriller, this series is for you. 5 stars
 
The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)
 
The Amazon link to The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2) is: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M9WWKW/ 
 
 

Our top rated, coming-of-age spy thriller The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2) starts in the ‘Windy City’ that is Chicago where our central character Nine, the ninth-born orphan, is raised…

The vagrant’s parents had always assured him the city’s misleading nickname had nothing to do with the weather. His mother had insisted the Windy City label came from the longwinded speeches given by the city’s Nineteenth Century politicians, while his father claimed the moniker had been mischievously bestowed by competitive New Yorkers in their attempt to win the World Trade Fair of 1893.

      

From Chicago, readers are taken to the rural centre of Mount Pleasant, in Iowa…

Despite the early hour, Mount Pleasant was coming alive. Many of its seven thousand residents were already up and about. Today was the weekly farmers’ market day, and for many that was the social event of the week. Those who were planning to sell their wares at the market were already making their way to the venue. Some were on foot while others drove vehicles that included cars, trucks and tractors, and even a horse-drawn cart.

     

From Iowa interstate through America’s Midwest…

By late evening, the Ford Falcon had crossed Nebraska’s western border into Colorado and continued unerringly toward Arizona.

Nine was relieved that Trey showed zero signs of fatigue and didn’t seem interested in stopping or sleeping. Whatever this guy’s on, it’s working. Nine could tolerate the drugs and the heavy metal music, but Caligula’s bowels were something else. Even with both rear windows down, there wasn’t enough fresh air to hide the Pit Bull’s foul stench. What made it worse was Trey seemed oblivious to Caligula’s constant farting.

               

To Santa Monica, greater Los Angeles…

The orphan watched the Ford Falcon until it disappeared into traffic then stood for a moment and took in his surroundings. To the north were the Santa Monica Mountains, the peaks of which looked like towering silhouettes. To the south he could see the community of Venice. Behind him were skyscrapers of the city’s business district and in front of him was the vast Pacific Ocean. Nine also observed the local populace who included yuppies, hippies, homeless and numerous beautiful people. Clearly, Santa Monica was a popular destination, as evidenced by the amount of tourists who mingled with the locals.

                

To Guyana’s Amazon rainforest…

Tropical heat, humidity and mosquitoes assailed the unlikely partners as they followed the Maparri River in the isolated Kanuku Mountains, in southwest Guyana. A tributary of the Rupununi River, the Maparri was a scenic wonder. Its usually placid, crystal clear waters occasionally morphed into churning white water, cascading over high, spectacular waterfalls. More than once, the two orphan-operatives had to deviate away from the river to avoid impassable falls and rapids.

                     

Click on the cover of our novel below to access and read the first few chapters – to establish whether The Orphan Factory is a novel you’d like to read.

The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)

To order The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2) go to: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M9WWKW/

For more info about The Orphan Trilogy, go to: http://www.youtube.com/user/SterlingGateBooks

 ★★★★★Thoroughly enjoyed!, September 20, 2012
This review is from: The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2) (Kindle Edition)

After reading The Ninth Orphan, I was eagerly awaiting this instalment. It didn’t disappoint. This is not normally the sort of book I’d read, but I’ve enjoyed both books so much that I couldn’t put them down until they were finished.

This book gives us an even better insight into Nine’s life and his personality. As soon as I’d finished it I wanted to go back and read the previous book, so I could better understand his decisions/motives as an adult. The book has a good mix of both fast-paced action, and detailed background description – allowing the reader to really build a picture of the characters and settings.

I’m liking the fact this is part of a trilogy – I want more!!!!!

For this, and all reviews for The Orphan Factory, go to:

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M9WWKW/

The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)

Louisiana historian Remy Benoit is “an advocate of our (US) Veterans and of our youth, both being parts of our society too often overlooked”. She is also the webmistress of www.WelcomeHomeSoldier.com – a site where she presents a free seminar, devoted to helping others, civilians and military, use history for healing and writing. Three of her books – Island Quilts, Letty, and Peace, Now – can be found at Amazon.com 
 
Here’s Remy’s review of The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)
 
★★★★★ “Truth is like the sun….” August 16, 2012
Format: Kindle Edition
 
Truth.
We are raised to tell the truth.
We are raised to not lie.
What are the truths that we learn in school? Are they absolute; are they colored by the history of the victors?
We are told to not color outside the lines; that trees are not pink, or purple, or red.
 
But there are red maples, there are pink and yellow orchid trees. Lilac trees come pretty close to purple.
When we are confronted with a problem, we are told to think outside the box; in effect, color outside the lines.
So wherein does truth lie? Oxymoron there? Truth. LieGenetic engineering. Secret government operations. Genetically enhanced children, twenty-three of them, raised in an “orphanage”; trained as assassins to do the wet work for a global conspiracy to dominate the world in the hands of the chosen few, who, well yes, have chosen themselves to be chosen.
No job too horrid if it enables the plan to proceed.
No where to go; no one to go to; all hours programmed. Called by numbers rather than names. Everything, everything, sub rosa.
 
Trained, and trained, and trained some more. Sharing one birth date on New Year’s Day.
And given special medications to see to it that their enhancements are supported.
And told that they are the ones who are guarding the rights of the people; that they are the resistance to those who would forward self-serving evil empires. Bred to the task; born to the task; lock stepping each day into being “ready” to go out there and do what must be done. Protect the rights of the people by doing away with the bad guys; protect the existence of the “program” by making sure that those who stand in the way of its clandestine operations and its funding are eliminated.
 
No questions; follow orders; do the job; ‘ret up for the next job. No questions.
 
Destiny, my dears. You were bred to, born to, prepared physically, mentally, and psychologically to do the job.
You are brilliant, unstoppable. You are OMEGA!
Well, yes…and no.
Meet Nine. He has questions. He has issues. He has a thought or three, or three
dozen. Somehow all things do not fit into the program. All truths are not so. Many lies are in those alleged truths.
 
“Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain’t goin’ away.” So said the man who told you to NOT step on his blue suede shoes.
 
Nine has questions. Nine has perhaps more in common with all of us than makes us comfortable. Meet Nine. What is truly left of him? You decide; he takes you on an twisting and turning ride on the edge of a cliff without a guardrail; the question is, are you ready for the road the questions ask you to travel?
 
Citizen, or denizen of the deep psyche of those who absolutely know what we need; and what they need to take from us to get it?
 
Buckle up. Dangerous road lined with those questions of Nine’s. Black ice and black ops perhaps have a lot in common. You don’t see’em coming until you spin out.
 
* * * * *
The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)
 
The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)  is available at: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M9WWKW/
 
Remy’s review of The Ninth Orphan (The Orphan Trilogy, #1) is available at: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0056I4FKC
 
For more about The Orphan Trilogy of books go to: http://www.youtube.com/user/SterlingGateBooks
 
 
 

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:

 The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)

The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2) top rated

The Orphan Factory, our prequel to The Ninth Orphan, has entered Amazon’s top rated spy books list only three weeks after its publication launch.

 The Orphan Factory, the latest novel from prolific New Zealand father-and-son writing and filmmaking team Lance and James Morcan, has entered Amazon’s top rated spy books list only three weeks after its publication launch.  

The new release espionage thriller has received excellent reviews from readers and book critics alike. It’s a prequel to the Morcans’ international thriller, The Ninth Orphan (The Orphan Trilogy, #1), which was published in 2011 by Sterling Gate Books.

Also published last year was their historical adventure Fiji: A Novel. It and The Ninth Orphan have been regular visitors to Amazon’s bestseller lists. The authors are adapting both these into feature film screenplays and have put them into development with their production company, Morcan Motion Pictures.

Meanwhile, the Morcans are currently writing the final novel in The Orphan Trilogy, a sequel titled The Orphan Uprising, for publication in 2013.

Lance, who is based in Papamoa, says their film and literary endeavours, which span more than a decade, haven’t been without their challenges.

“James, who is also an actor, is based in Sydney so we have had to do most of our writing long distance,” he says.

“Father-and-son novel writing teams are almost unheard of, and that does pose some interesting creative challenges. Add to that working in separate countries and it feels like mission impossible at times.

“However, with the success of our latest novel and creation of a viable thriller franchise, the colossal effort over so many years all suddenly seems worthwhile.”

Morcan Motion Pictures has produced two feature films. These are The Pawn, which was shot in Melbourne and has screened at film festivals in Australia and Italy, and the New Zealand thriller Desired, which premiered at Cannes last year.

The Morcans are currently seeking New Zealand Film Commission funding for Silent Fear, a chilling thriller which involves Auckland’s deaf community and will be helmed by rising Auckland director Amanda Phillips.

Supporting links:

The Ninth Orphan (The Orphan Trilogy, #1): http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0056I4FKC

The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2): http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M9WWKW/

Fiji: A Novel: http://www.amazon.com/Fiji-A-Novel-ebook/dp/B0057YCZM0/

Amazon’s top rated Spy Books: http://www.amazon.com/gp/top-rated/digital-text/157322011/ref=zg_bs_tab_t_tr?pf_rd_p=1374969722&pf_rd_s=right-8&pf_rd_t=2101&pf_rd_i=list&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=0EN7ADDFZTH5HRBGKAAS

Welcome to this, our first blog!

We are pleased to announce the launch of our new release thriller novel The Orphan Factory – Book #2 in The Orphan Trilogy.

Published by Sterling Gate Books, it’s the prequel to The Ninth Orphan, which has been a regular visitor to Amazon’s bestseller lists and which we have adapted  to a feature film screenplay. (Book #1 is now in development with Morcan Motion Pictures).

The Orphan Factory is coming-of-age spy thriller – an epic, atmospheric story that begins with twenty three genetically superior orphans being groomed to become elite spies in Chicago’s Pedemont Orphanage and concludes with a political assassination deep in the Amazon jungle.

The storyline in brief:

In the late 1970’s, in Chicago, Illinois, the secretive Omega Agency initiates the Pedemont Project – a radical experiment utilizing genetic engineering technologies – to create twenty three orphan babies with the plan to turn them into the world’s most effective assassins.

One of the prodigies will rebel: meet Number Nine, an orphan with a mind of his own.

In 1998, when Nine reaches adulthood and graduates with honors from the Pedemont Orphanage, he is already an adept of the deadly espionage arts. Ordered by his Omega masters to assassinate a survivor of the Jonestown tragedy in Guyana’s Amazon rainforest, Nine is forced to draw upon all of his advanced training just to stay alive.

The Orphan Factory (The Orphan Trilogy, #2)

The Orphan Factory is selling now as an ebook via Amazon. The trade paperback version will be published later in 2012, and the sequel, The Orphan Uprising, will be published in 2013.

The Amazon link for the Kindle ebook version is: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008M9WWKW/

Happy reading! (Reviews are welcome).