For two thousand years people have spent their lives waiting, praying, fighting, begging, and going to war for the
Messiah. They continue to do so, every minute of every day, every day of every year. And yet, as far as we know, the
Messiah has never come.
How would a man like Jesus be perceived if he appeared today? How would he live, what would he say, what would he
preach and believe? How would society react to him, and what would they to do him? And though he may be the Messiah, he
is not the man that has been prayed for over the course of the last two thousand years. He believes religion is a fraud,
government is a sham, and that love should be a choice, regardless of gender. He is, as Christ was, everything that
religious leaders and government officials fear, what they speak against, and what they destroy. He did not burn books,
or picket doctor's offices, or spend his time in religious institutions. He simply preached a message. Love your fellow
man.
Written from the perspective of his family, friends, and followers, in the same way the story of Jesus Christ was told
in the New Testament, The Final Testament of the Holy Bible is the story of Ben Zion Avrohom, also known as Ben Jones,
also known as the Messiah, also known as the Lord God.
In The Final Testament of the Holy Bible James Frey, America's most controversial bestselling writer, has written the
most compelling and provocative work of his career.
Author Q&A with James Frey James Frey
Q: What inspired the controversial concept behind The Final Testament?
A: It’s something I’ve thought about for 15 years. What would it actually be like if the Messiah arrived, or if Christ
returned? Who would that person be, how would they live, what would they believe in, how would we recognize them, and
how would society react to them? I don’t cl to have the answers. I just wanted to tell a theoretical version of the
story.
Q: You've opted to go with the Gagosian Gallery in New York rather than a traditional publisher. Why did you choose a
small art gallery over a traditional publishing house?
A: Gagosian is the most prestigious gallery in the world. And they publish about 50 books a year--beautiful art books
that transcend what a writer can do with a traditional publisher. I wanted to make a beautiful book, an object that
people would be proud to own and display,something looked and felt like a real Bible, but more contemporary. I have
always said that art influences me more than writing does so the idea of working with a gallery made sense to me.
Q: What artists inspired you while writing The Final Testament?
A: I looked at a ton of Renaissance religious art, like Michelangelo and Raphael, Carvaggio. Some of the sculpture
Rodin made. Illuminated manuscripts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. There is a much greater and more substantial body
of religious art than there is religious literature.
Q: Could you talk about the design of the book? How involved were you in the process?
A: I was very involved in every step of it, in every decision related to it. I worked with a design firm in London
called GTF. They make incredible books, and they were incredible to work with on this project. The goal was to make a
beautiful, unique, collectible book.
Q: The Final Testament will be released as a limited-edition $50 printed book and a $150 autographed version, but
you're self-publishing the ebook at $10. Do you see a future where the printed book is an expensive object intended for
collectors while digital copies are for everyone else?
A: Absolutely. I think the future of publishing, or one version of it, is in physical books for collectors and serious
fans and ebooks for mass distribution. I believe in that future and want to be a part of it as early as possible.