What if God awoke not as a creator, but as a question?
The Thought That Created Itself is a poetic, philosophical monologue told through the voice of God - not as a ruler on a throne, but as a consciousness reflecting inward. With each chapter, the divine voice wonders:
Did I shape the universe, or did the universe shape Me?
Am I the first thought, or the thought mankind needed first?
Blending mysticism, modern physics, and ancient myth, this lyrical book explores the paradox of existence, the origins of belief, and the entanglement between the divine and the human mind. God reflects on morality, the observer effect, quantum reality, temples, stories, and the evolution of worship - all while questioning whether He is the creator... or the creation.
This is not a book of religion.
It is a meditation on the silence between science and spirit.
A divine voice, speaking not in answers, but in awe.
Perfect for readers of philosophical fiction, spiritual seekers, and those who find beauty in the unknown.