Jef Gray believes the best stories are the ones we recognize in our own lives.Born a military brat, Gray attended ten different schools before his high school graduation, never staying anywhere long enough to call it home. That constant motion-the feeling of always arriving, always departing-taught him what aeronauts learn the hard way: that home is people, not places. Years later, as a U.S. Air Force veteran and distinguished technology leader, he watched people make the same wager-trading time for money, working certain hours for uncertain futures.Airovale was born from a question that haunted him: What if time itself was the treasure we seek, disguised by the pursuits and decisions of the day? Would we later regret chasing wealth over experiences, or find comfort in the fortune we secured?Gray mixed his interests in art, travel, and science to create a steampunk fantasy world woven from cultures and folklore across an archipelago of volcanic islands-a place where aeronauts fly zeppelins in pursuit of commerce, encounter fae creatures, and make choices paid for by time away from home.Gray's lifelong fascination with language and culture led him to found the International Peace & Film Festival in 2015, driven by the belief that cultural exchange through art and science can respect borders while building connection for mutual benefit. Participation in the festival, through independent film, has reached 91 countries since it began. That same philosophy runs through Airovale's multicultural tapestry-Ukrainian blessings, fae magic, Russian, German, and Irish characters, mixed with American ambition in a world where time is worth more than coin.When he's not writing, Gray creates micro-documentaries, plays guitar, and spends time with his two children in Orlando, Florida.