As a young child, Noah King rejected the simple life and aspired to flee the small Maine fishing village of Walden's Cove.
Enjoying the company of books rather than people, he prepared for a life that he spent so many hours reading about. On the day Noah was supposed to watch over his younger brother Aidan, he horrifically witnesses Aidan die in a car accident. After Aidan's death, Noah deals with his guilt and pain by refusing his mother and father's spiritual and simple way of life. He becomes an atheist anddistances himself from his parents who find comfort in the church. His longing to pursue a life dedicated to the physical takes him to University. During Noah's stay at University, he throws himself into his studies, a loner searching to understand the essence of Man when God is removed from the equation. One stormy night he faces another tragedy - the death of his father. On the way home to comfort his mother, Noah is in a car accident. He wakes to find himself in the unknown reality he previously denied. He is forced to reexamine his earlier perceptions of life. In an ominous courtroom, Noah faces a Prosecutor and jury where he must justify the continuation of human existence. The Sinking of Noah's Ark takes readers on a philosophical journey that discusses the
evolution of humanity in the spiritual and biological sense. Noah must match wits against the Prosecutor on a variety of hot button issues that include Theology, Philosophy, Evolutionary Psychology, Spirituality, Anthropology and other academic fields. Free Will is an important theme highlighted in the book. Although the evolution of organised
religion and its roots are discussed, THE SINKING OF NOAH'S ARK is not a religious story, but a work that analyses the human condition.
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