Peter Thornton doesn't believe in God. Or rather, he doesn't believe in
one God. "All paths are valid," he teaches his university students.
One evening he ventures to the archaeology museum and touches an
artifact recently discovered from ancient Babylon. At the touch he is
transported three thousand years back in time to Old Testament Babylon.
Somehow he knows the language--and the people know him as Rim-Sin,
sorcerer and high priest to the gods of Babylon. The moment he arrives
he is accused of murder--a murder Rim-Sin committed--and he must run for
his life. Against the backdrop of Nebuchadnezzar's court at its zenith,
he and rival sorcerers vie with Beltshazzar, the Jewish upstart, for the
king's favor. As Peter scrambles to get back to the twenty-first century
he encounters a lovely young woman who has some disturbingly powerful
arguments about the God of the Bible. Peter won't get home until he has
fallen from his pride. Fallen from his polytheism. Fallen from Babel.