Enjoy 10% off on selected ebooks!

The Lost Daughters of Adam and Eve

Before Noah: The Forgotten Mothers of Humanity

$37.00$27.00

There are mysteries in the Bible that millions have read, yet few have truly seen.

Some mysteries are loud—Noah’s ark, the tower of Babel, the flood, the fall of man. They dominate sermons, documentaries, debates, and imagination. But some mysteries are quiet. They hide in a single verse, in a passing phrase, in words so familiar that readers move past them without noticing the doorway they conceal.

One of those mysteries appears near the beginning of human history.

After naming Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel, and Seth, Scripture makes a brief statement: Adam had sons and daughters.

And then… silence.

No names.
No stories.
No lineage records.
No explanation.

Who were these daughters?

They would have been the first women ever born into the world. The first sisters. The first wives. The first mothers after Eve. Through them, humanity multiplied. Through them, tribes formed, cities rose, generations spread across the earth. Without them, civilization could not exist.

Yet history barely whispers their existence.

How can the mothers of nations remain unnamed?

This book begins with that question.

For centuries, most readers accepted the silence without investigation. But beyond the familiar pages of Genesis lie ancient texts, forgotten traditions, preserved manuscripts, and early interpretations that attempt to fill the gap. Among them are writings such as the Book of Jubilees, the Book of Enoch, Syriac traditions, rabbinic commentary, and the preserved canon of the Ethiopian Church. In these sources, names begin to emerge—Awan, Azura, and others. Fragments of memory appear where official records are sparse.

Were these names historically accurate?
Were they theological traditions?
Were they symbolic reconstructions by later communities?
Or do they preserve echoes of knowledge once widely known and later lost?

This book does not ask the reader to accept every ancient claim blindly. Instead, it invites you into an honest exploration—part biblical study, part historical investigation, part recovery of forgotten voices.

Because the issue is larger than names.

This is about how history is remembered—and how it is forgotten.