There is a name written more than six thousand times in the Hebrew scriptures, and almost no one alive knows how to say it.
Four letters. You can see them on the page, copied by hand for thousands of years with such care that a scribe would destroy a whole sheet rather than mark one letter wrong. The letters survived. But somewhere across the centuries, the sound slipped away, and the most sacred name ever written became a name that could be seen and not spoken.
How does that happen? How does a people lose the pronunciation of the one name that mattered to them most, when they never lost a single ordinary word? And what exactly was lost when the sound went silent, a pronunciation only, or something deeper?
The Lost Vowels follows that question with the eyes of a working man rather than a scholar. Plainly, honestly, and without pretending to certainties no one actually has, it traces the Name from its four silent letters through the centuries of reverence that buried its sound, lays the competing pronunciations side by side without crowning a winner, and asks why naming has always been treated as something close to an act of creation itself. Along the way it uncovers a quieter mystery hidden in the letters, a connection between the Name and the very breath of life.
This is a book for the curious, the questioning, and the spiritually independent, anyone who has ever sensed that the accepted story runs thin and wanted to dig for themselves. You will not be handed an answer. You will be handed something better: a way to hold a Name you cannot fully speak.
It is also only the beginning. The Lost Vowels is Book One of The Living Name, a journey that starts with four ancient letters and reaches, eventually, toward the strangest question of our own time.