The Last Adam

About

A war older than humanity, now awakened in the modern world.

Mary Levitt never expected her life as a struggling Los Angeles singer to spiral into chaos. But when her unexpected pregnancy begins attracting violent attacks, haunting visions, and the attention of forces she cannot explain, Mary realizes something far more profound and far more dangerous is unfolding around her.

Across the world, Joseph Riesman steps into his father's massive Jerusalem development project, only to encounter shadowy political figures and impossible, ancient forces moving beneath the surface of city and stone. What begins as a family obligation quickly becomes a collision with a power far greater than he understands.

When the archangel named Raphael intervenes and pays a devastating price, Mary and Joseph are thrust into a conflict waged by angels, demons, and human agents who have been waiting centuries for this moment. Their every step is watched, manipulated, or hunted by those who fear what Mary's child represents. A Messiah.

From the streets of Los Angeles to the contested ground of Jerusalem, the couple must navigate betrayal, spiritual warfare, and escalating threats from dark powers operating in both boardrooms and battlefields as they race to protect the life destined to change the world.

Bold, cinematic, and charged with supernatural suspense, The Last Adam reimagines an ancient story through a modern lens of faith, danger, and divine purpose.

Praise for this book

Ron Echols’s The Last Adam is a bold and genre-blending supernatural thriller that successfully balances cinematic storytelling with intimate, character-driven drama. Readers are treated to a high-stakes narrative that moves between the spiritual battlegrounds of Heaven and Earth, anchored by memorable and familiar characters like Mary Levitt, a struggling singer whose journey from rejection to divine purpose is both grounded and gripping. Echols weaves together elements of suspense, faith, and speculative fiction with remarkable confidence, making this a title that’s equally at home on a church book club shelf or among fans of The Screwtape Letters and The Matrix. With a brisk pace and skillful worldbuilding, The Last Adam keeps readers invested through moments of wonder, fear, tenderness, and hope. It’s rare to see a debut that balances accessibility with ambition this well.

The Last Adam is a daring, emotionally charged thriller that reimagines the Nativity through a contemporary, high-stakes lens. Ron Echols masterfully blends biblical prophecy with cinematic action, weaving angels, adversaries, and human frailty into a gripping narrative that spans from Los Angeles to Jerusalem. At the heart of the story is Mary, a young, talented singer whose life spirals into divine chaos, and Joseph, a man caught between legacy, love, and a growing war he doesn’t yet understand. The characters are richly drawn, the pacing relentless, and the spiritual themes handled with both reverence and bold imagination. Think The Da Vinci Code meets This Present Darkness, but with fresher emotional stakes and a thoroughly modern pulse. Echols isn’t just telling a story, he’s constructing a world where ancient powers still pull the strings of everyday lives. A truly compelling debut.

The Last Adam is a bold, genre-defying novel that reimagines the birth of Jesus in a modern, suspense-filled setting. With vivid prose and haunting imagery, it plunges readers into a contemporary America gripped by unseen spiritual warfare, where angels and demons battle over the destiny of mankind. The author masterfully blends biblical allegory with supernatural suspense, crafting a narrative that is both thought-provoking and pulse-pounding. This is not just a retelling, it’s a reimaging that invites readers to wrestle with faith, doubt, and the unseen forces that shape our world.
This novel stands out for its emotional depth, cinematic pacing, and characters who feel vividly real, especially the conflicted modern-day Joseph and Mary, whose struggles mirror the timeless tension between destiny and free will. The Last Adam is as much a spiritual thriller as it is a deeply human story, and it lingers in the mind long after the final page.

Ron Echols has done something I rarely see—he's taken the most important story in human history and made it visceral, immediate, and impossible to put down. The Last Adam doesn't just retell the Incarnation; it drops you into the middle of a spiritual war where every choice matters and every soul hangs in the balance.
This isn't your grandmother's Christian fiction. It's raw, it's real, and it wrestles with the messy intersection of divine purpose and human frailty. Echols writes with the urgency of someone who knows the stakes are eternal. The result? A book that will grip your heart, challenge your assumptions, and leave you changed.
If you're tired of safe, predictable Christian novels, The Last Adam is the wake-up call you've been waiting for.

The Last Adam asks what I think is one of the most important questions of faith: Are ancient lessons truly timeless? Or, in Echols creative experiment, if we lay the framework of the past in our modern times, will we get the same result? By setting this exciting stage, Echols allows the reader to decide for themselves. Through a blend of speculative fiction and contemporary drama, he reimagines the quiet moments of spiritual reflections and the battlegrounds of spiritual warfare. With cinematic prose, mythic characters who feel grounded, and an emotionally driven narrative full of surprises, Echols lets the reader wrestle with questions of purpose, identity, and redemption without the need for any definitive answers. Readers who enjoy faith-driven stories with a touch of the supernatural will be excited to explore familiar characters forced to find their way in our strange new world.