You don’t feel the need to say what the heck it is?
This book does not answer every question which readers will have about human origins. For starters, there may have been a time and a place where the first modern human in the universe appeared... The book does not address that, but it will give you a very good idea of where the first humans in our own system were living, which was not Earth.
Earth 50,000 years ago was a very dark and cold environment, which is why all of the old creatures of Earth had the same kinds of huge dark-world eyes. That included all dinosaurs, the Neanderthal and all other hominids, and leftover creatures from that age such as lemurs, tarsiers, owls, bush-babies and the like.
Humans and dolphins have the smallest relative eye sizes of advanced creatures. That is one of the factors that rules Earth out as a plausible home world for modern humans.
Several of the questions which this book DOES answer are very big ones. These include:
Where did modern man come from? (at least within our own system...)
What was the relationship between Cro-Magnon man and the familiar antediluvian people of Genesis?
What if any relationship was there between humans and hominids such as the Neanderthal?
What caused the roughly 26-degree axis tilts of Saturn, Neptune, Mars, and Earth?
Were those bodies captured as a group recently?
If so, would that have made our system a double system, Saturnian group (Saturn, Neptune, Mars, Earth) to the system south, Sun/Jupiter/Mercury group to the North?
Would Jupiter have been substantially closer to the sun under such conditions? That is in fact the normal situation in our galaxy for dwarf stars and gas-giant planets aligned with a main sequence star like our sun.
What would Ganymede look like under such circumstances? Ganymede is a frozen wasteland now; would it not have been a fresh-water ocean world under such circumstances?
Is the extreme low moment of inertia of Ganymede due to an immense salt-water outer mantel/ocean as is claimed, or due to an outer mantel of pumice, created by intense arcing between Jupiter and Ganymede very early on?
Could Ganymede have been a fresh water ocean world with islands and floating bergs of pumice, and luxuriant vegetation?
This book answers these and a number of related questions.
One question that I wish the book investigated is, "Did Immanuel Velikovsky survive his death?"
Proceed at your own risk. For me, I am outta here!