Written from the text. Not around it.
In 1773, a Scottish traveler returned from Ethiopia carrying a book the rest of the world had been told did not exist. For over a thousand years, the wider Christian world had lost it entirely — the Ethiopian church alone kept it, copied by hand, generation after generation.
Inside it: a 364-day calendar, gates through which the sun and moon pass, angels appointed to govern each one — and the names of the two hundred Watchers who fell. The Enoch Reading is the first time that calendar has been matched, gate by gate, to a modern birth date. The Jubilee Reading draws from a second recovered text — the Book of Jubilees — which maps the architecture of time across a human lifetime into seven phases of seven years each. Both books are built from primary sources, with full appendices showing exactly where every name and date comes from.