Godscience begins from a place many people know well: the place of asking. Not polished answers. Not rigid doctrine. Just the deep, unsettling questions that have followed humanity for centuries. Frank Geltner writes about God, conscience, existence, and belief in a way that feels personal rather than distant.
What gives the book its pull is that it does not speak down to the reader. It does not rush to settle every tension. Instead, it moves through philosophy, spirituality, doubt, and reflection with patience. That makes it feel less like an argument and more like an honest search.
Some books want to prove something. This one feels more interested in exploring what it means to live with wonder, uncertainty, and the need to understand more than we currently do.