This book is the definition of circular reasoning and begging the question. First, he creates his own hypothesis of the origin of life and the emergence of humans. So far so good. But then he creates “evidence” by relying on his hypothesis, as in “If my hypothesis is true, then it stands to reason that this ‘evidence’ is also true, because otherwise my hypothesis couldn’t be true, so obviously it must all be true.” Even his comments about real things, such as bacteria, phages, and retroviruses, are simply wrong.
No footnotes, minimal list of references. And who is this guy, anyway? An archeologist? Astrophysicist? Does he have any training in this field? No, he’s an “independent researcher.” Good luck finding his bio.
Pure fantasy, and not very good fantasy. If you want really tight fantasy, read China Miéville.