The Almost Universe is a mythic origin story about how wisdom is formed, carried, and passed forward. Rooted in Appalachian cadence and written with the gentle clarity of a creation myth, the book follows the Tortoise - the oldest, slowest, and most patient of beings - as he gathers the lessons of the world and shapes them into thirteen animals who will one day guide the children back into balance.
The story begins with the world slipping out of rhythm when the ancient thirteen¿moon calendar is replaced by twelve uneven months. "The world slipped out of rhythm," the text says, and the children slowly forget the quiet truths that once came naturally. To restore harmony, the Tortoise draws on the long memory etched into his shell and begins shaping the animals, each one born from a need, a longing, or a missing piece in the one who came before.
The Owl is created first - not one of the thirteen, but the companion who helps the Tortoise see the whole picture. Together they form the Council of Two, a pair who understands that creation requires both wisdom and imagination. From their conversations comes the Frog, the first of the thirteen, who embodies persistence and the courage to leap even when the landing is uncertain. Each animal follows in a chain of need: the Bird for courage and perspective, the Roadrunner for speed and forward motion, the Bear for strength and leadership, the Fox for strategy, the Squirrel for preparation, the Bookworm for curiosity, the Hyena for whole¿picture understanding, the Possum for rest, the Raccoon for energy and discipline, the Coyote for resilience, and the Mouse for quiet observation.
Each creature arrives with a gift - and a gap. Each one asks the same question: What do I need that I do not yet have? Their answers shape the next animal, creating a lineage of lessons that form a complete circle of becoming. The final figure, the Groundhog, stands slightly apart, embodying repetition, rhythm, and the steady return that turns learning into identity.
In the second half of the book, the animals gather in a great circle and finally understand their purpose. They are not separate beings but interconnected teachings, meant to be learned in cycles and returned to again and again. The Tortoise and Owl divide them into groups of three, each triad representing a system of emotional, physical, or spiritual growth. The Groundhog watches over them all, ensuring the lessons repeat until they become part of the child's bones.
The Almost Universe is a story of becoming - a mythic framework for understanding growth, emotion, resilience, and identity. It blends neuroscience with folklore, animal symbolism with gentle philosophy, and ancient rhythm with modern emotional truth. It reads like a creation myth, a guidebook, and a whispered reminder that the world still teaches us "in small voices, if we learn to listen."
It is a universe built not from magic, but from meaning - a place where every creature carries a lesson, every lesson forms a cycle, and every cycle brings the reader closer to who they are becoming.