“Altogether, Adam lived 930 years, and then he died.” — Genesis 5:5
But Scripture never tells us how.
The Book of An Auth-ology of Truth is more than a story—it is a mirror. Through the scattered voices, across generations and places, a haunting pattern each grappling with love and loss, guilt and grace, survival and meaning. Their words feel different, yet eerily familiar. Because their struggles are ours.
Is truth a matter of fact, or of perspective? Is it found in the courtroom, in the silence of a diary, in the grip of loss—or in the spaces between? These Adams are not just characters; they are reflections of what it means to be human. To be man. To be men. To exist in the tension between what is lived and what is believed.
Dark, spiritual, and unsettling, this book dares to suggest that none of us are new here. That our lives, however divided, are threads of the same fabric. That the story of Adam is not history, but memory.
Jorge Jones is a storyteller who explores the spaces between truth, memory, and imagination. Born in 1987, he grew up with a love for philosophy, spirituality, and the kinds of stories that blur the line between what is lived and what is believed. His writing reflects a fascination with how different voices and generations interpret love, loss, survival, and grace—threads that tie us all together.
Jorge is the author of The Book of Adam: An Auth-ology of Truth, a dark, spiritual, and thought-provoking collection that dares to ask whether our lives are not just history, but memory. His work blends cultural influences, deep questions, and unsettling beauty into stories that invite readers to reflect on their own truths.
When he’s not writing, Jorge enjoys exploring philosophy, learning languages, and creating spaces where imagination and reality overlap. He believes stories are more than entertainment—they are mirrors, and sometimes, they show us who we really are.
This book really needs you to pay attention to the messages it is telling. But when you pay attention, it speaks to your heart.. it's beautifully written. It's definitely not a story that you can listen to while doing another task. It tells different stories from different perspectives/ideas. You have Personal, Ethical, Unseen, Witness, and Everywhere. The narrator (Joseph Fouke) was fabulous- I would definitely listen to more books by him. And I would listen to this book again. I received this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion. I would recommend this book when you have times to sit and digest the messages of this book.