Amusing romantic novel

Cynical TV executive Henry Lazaard (“Lizard”) is made manager of beautiful Sung-Tin Chi, Chinese scriptwriter for a children's cartoon series. Turns out, Sung-Tin's inspiration is evolution, specifically a mysterious document called “Beths Book.” Follow their romance as Henry works to sabotage Sung-Tin's attempt to reform him. Along the way Sung-Tin reveals a plan for world domination that hangs on a clash between two concepts of the self, and evolution's role in forming them.

A quick-read introduction for teachers and school board members to the parties and issues involved in the controversy over teaching evolution in the classroom.

220 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2. Paperback. USA $14.95.

Published 2006. ISBN 0-9779470-0-9

It is 6991AD. As student Gregory Dumont draws on his father's wisdom about our time and our future, we trace how human nature becomes re-shaped around theories of evolution that, surprisingly, mimic stages in evolutionary theory over the past two centuries.

Utopian novel

Manifesto damning bad science

Nowhere are the Two Cultures further apart than over evolution. Yet on no other topic is dialog between the two sides more desirable.

SOS sets the table for reconciliation. It traces how science came to deny the self, how natural selection came out of that tradition, why it's bad science and how science continues to be shackled by the faulty assumptions behind it. We abandon these assumptions, take a fresh look at evolution, and come up with an altogether different mechanism based on the self. The book ends with tactics for attacking natural selection and evolutionary psychology.

175 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2. Paperback. USA $14.95.

Publication Nov. 13, 2007. ISBN 0-9779470-2-5.

Combining a broad historical sensibility with respect for the discipline of scientific discourse, “Father...” reveals the implications for human nature of each step in evolutionary theory to date, readying us to question the implications of steps to come. Fine addition to the multi-disciplinary study of evolution.

202 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2. Paperback. USA $21.95.

Published Spring 2007. ISBN 0-9779470-1-7