Jack, Adam and Heather open a box made from the Tree of Knowledge and discover a powerful truth that can save us from Oblivion.
Jack believes we must focus on fixing our emotional and mental health, and fast. From mind-interrupting chemicals to emotional instability, bad parenting, and a broken education system; time has come to make this our top priority. “We’re not prepared for the technology we are creating. We must build the Solomon Project, before it’s too late.”
But Jack’s foster brother, Adam Lawson, now President of the United States, offers a different solution. Instead of fixing society, he builds The Wall—banishing society’s worst offenders beyond it.
Murderers and rapists first...and then, others. Adam has an agenda of his own – to test humanity’s sanity, cruelty - their right to continue to exist at all.
As the debate comes to an epic showdown, people begin to suspect something terrible: that their popular and beloved president may be a psychopath—with a terrible secret.
The choice will be ours. And time is running out.
Randy Swank is an economist and businessman with 40 years of experience spanning business, academia, government service and behavioral health. Throughout his personal and professional life, he witnessed the destructive effects of addiction, emotional disorder, and trauma, which inspired him to write The Solomon Project. People close to him would reach out to professionals for help, only to discover that they were left to figure it out on their own. It has cost the hopes and lives of many, including the life of his best friend.His debut novel weaves together social commentary, speculative fiction, and psychological insight to deliver a powerful message about the future of humanity-and a perilous choice we will soon face.
Randy has worked across sectors — building businesses, advising public agencies, teaching, and supporting behavioral health initiatives. The concerns that drive his fiction are drawn from years of observing how social systems, untreated trauma, and addictive patterns shape individuals and communities.
When he’s not writing, Randy enjoys reading widely, researching social policy, and speaking about mental health, resilience, and the ethical implications of emerging technologies
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