Los Angeles, CA — June 1, 2026
There is a question that sits underneath every creation story, every cosmological model, every late-night conversation about why anything exists at all. That question is not “how did the universe begin?” Science has a working answer for that. The deeper question is why creation was possible to begin with. What allowed it?
The Dream of God: How Something Comes from Nothing by Son of man is built around exactly that question. The book, written by Anetere’a Aisake Puletasi, is part metaphysical exploration, part spiritual guide, and part philosophical argument. It proposes that the universe is not an accident of physics but an intentional act of divine consciousness, that reality as we experience it is, at its most fundamental level, a dream.
The premise sounds poetic. But Son of man is careful. He does not ask readers to abandon reason. He asks them to notice where reason runs out. And at the edges of what science can say about the origin of existence, he finds room for a vision of creation that is both ancient and strikingly new.
Darkness, in Son of man’s framing, is not something to overcome. It is the first form of something, the condition that makes light possible. Nothingness is not the opposite of existence. It is its seed. These are not rhetorical flourishes. They are the load-bearing ideas of the entire work, and Son of man develops them with patience and precision across the book’s chapters.
What emerges for the reader is a genuinely different way of orienting to the world. The book does not ask for belief. It asks for a willingness to look. To consider that the universe we inhabit might be held together by something more than gravity, something that ancient wisdom traditions pointed toward long before telescopes confirmed the existence of galaxies.
Written for seekers, for skeptics with open minds, for anyone who has felt the pull of something greater than what can be measured, this book is a rare thing: a work of serious philosophical inquiry that is also genuinely moving.
(Son of Man is available for interviews, author talks, and public speaking engagements. To obtain a review copy or coordinate an appearance, contact:andyaisake@gmail.com)