Flight of the Black Swan
MORE SPELLBINDING DOCU-FICTION FROM BARNEWALL:
Financial Fraud, Global Elitists, Intrigue
Unwittingly caught up in an international web of deceit and treachery, Meredith Morgan falls in love with and marries Russian scientist Alex Plotnikov, who was forced to clone prominent Americans in a plot to destroy the American economy.
In this sequel to When the Swan's Neck Breaks, author Marilyn MacGruder Barnewall continues in Flight of the Black Swan the spellbinding saga of Meredith and Alex who, together with former covert Intelligence Operative William Leonard and retired CIA agent Jake McGregor, set about implementing an extremely dangerous counter-plot to thwart enemies, both foreign and domestic, hell-bent on bringing America to her financial knees.
In what some readers call "docu-fiction," the economic terrorism currently suffered by the American populace is illuminated. Once again, Barnewall gently and skillfully weaves threads of belief, love, commitment, and patriotism throughout the dark webs of deceit.
Flight of the Black Swan is not for readers who want to hide from truth. Those who want to know what's happening, why, and how to change things will not be able to put this book down.
Ambassador Lee/Leo E. Wanta's "Foreword" sets the tone for this intriguing work of fiction. Millions of people follow the real life drama of Ambassador Wanta, America's most successful Intelligence Operative. He is credited with bringing down the Iron Curtain by skillfully manipulating the ruble into extinction while serving as President Ronald Reagan's favorite "junkyard dog."
Flight of the Black Swan is an offering to the American People. It is intended as a flashlight to help identify truth in these confusing times.
In his 2007 best-selling work of non-fiction, The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable, Nicholas Taleb defines Black Swans as unexpected or rare events and discusses ways they can be used to create financial havoc. Because my first book in this series was about a white swan, I decided - before hearing of Taleb's book - to use the words "Black Swan" in this title. God moves in strange ways and Taleb's book was published, and became a best-seller in the non-fiction category which, from my perspective, was a most interesting, "unexpected event."