This novel follows a quiet, unflinching conversation between two people who take truth seriously but stand on opposite sides of belief. John is a modern skeptic shaped by moral outrage, intellectual honesty, and disappointment with religion. Beatrice is a woman of faith who refuses to defend God with fragile arguments or dismiss hard questions with certainty. As their conversations unfold-across caf s, libraries, and long walks-long-held assumptions begin to give way, not through debate, but through honesty.
After the Arguments is not a book about winning religious disputes. It is a story about moral responsibility, authority, grace, and the cost of truth when certainty fails. Written in a reflective, literary style, it explores why skepticism often feels like integrity, why faith demands surrender rather than comfort, and why grace is more disruptive than judgment. This novel is for readers who are weary of religious posturing, allergic to easy answers, and still willing to sit with difficult questions.