TCOBS Book Summary
- Leo Mora
- Apr 4
- 4 min read

Here’s a complete summary of every book on The Crossover Bookshelf:
1. The Sacred Thread: A Journey to Encounter the Divine — $14.99 (Out of Stock)
A spiritual exploration focused on women’s psychology, relationships, and encountering the divine. No full description is available yet as it’s coming soon.
2. The AI Integration — $14.99
Mora argues that AI has evolved into a “sentence-level intelligence” — a cognitive partner capable of understanding human intent. The book balances philosophy with practical survival skills, covering two core pillars: rational/machine logic and human intuitive wisdom. A key idea is “Temporal Empathy” — the notion that every sentence we produce today becomes an interactive cognitive legacy for future civilizations. It also addresses the education gap schools leave behind, and positions AI integration as the path toward a Type I Civilization. 
3. La Corona de Dyson (Spanish) — $9.99
Explores how humanity can grow as a society using knowledge, wisdom, and values. It explains that advancing as a civilization — even reaching space — requires learning to trust, avoiding envy, managing money responsibly, and using technology to help rather than destroy. It emphasizes empathy, whole-brain thinking, and learning through experience, with the central idea that educating the next generation well is the foundation of a stronger, more humane future. 
4. Type I Civilization — $9.99
Outlines how humanity can evolve from a Type 0 to a Type I (interplanetary) civilization. It builds sequentially on the author’s prior works, addressing foundational human traits that need re-evaluation — trust, envy, money, and the “smart-a$$ syndrome.” It proposes a holistic educational philosophy that teaches children to use both sides of the brain, fosters empathy, and tailors learning to individual paths. It also introduces the concept of a “Mental Olympics” as a concrete mechanism to measure and drive civilizational progress. 
5. The Greatest Mystery — $9.99
Proposes that the Mona Lisa contains a hidden code — the symbols L, S, and 72 — left by Leonardo da Vinci for the future, one that cannot be deciphered through pure rational thought. Mora claims da Vinci knew only one person, centuries later, would be able to crack it, and that person turned out to be a modern-day Leonardo. The book reveals what that coded message is and its significance for humanity. 
6. Customer Zero: The Systemic Betrayal of Corporate America — FREE
An exposé detailing how large corporations use systemic policies to punish loyal customers, especially during financial hardship. Mora frames himself as “Customer Zero” — a 27-year Bank of America customer whose distress exposed three pillars of institutional failure: punishment (BofA slashing his credit limit), rigidity (Airbnb refusing to split a payment), and anonymity (companies blocking accountability through faceless systems). The book is a consumer guide on how to document abuse and escalate to regulators like the CFPB. It is dedicated to the public domain under CC0 — free to copy, share, and distribute. 
7. Steps to Freedom — $14.99
A self-help book structured around 13 “keys” to escaping a metaphorical “Matrix” of societal rules that trap people in debt, conformity, and dependence. Topics range from shifting from a scarcity to an abundance mindset, mastering money and leverage, reclaiming time, building resilience, and defining personal freedom holistically — financially, mentally, and temporally. Each chapter includes concrete “Take Action” exercises. The book concludes that knowledge alone is not enough — action is the essential final step. 
8. Pescando el Trabajo (Spanish) — $14.99
Teaches how to build a personal safety network to find work faster while still employed. It contrasts job-hunting with and without a job across five dimensions: negotiating power (employed candidates can walk away from bad offers), social proof (current employment signals competence), psychological pressure (less stress improves interview performance), narrative framing (growth-seeker vs. desperate), and network access (active employees get better referrals). 
9. The Atlantis Allegory — $14.99
An allegorical exploration connecting biblical narratives (Adam and Eve), ancient Sumerian history, and the legend of Atlantis. Mora posits that humanity descended not from primitive ancestors but from advanced civilizations that experienced a “Fall.” The book covers world religions, the Anunnaki deities from Mesopotamian tablets, and Plato’s Atlantis — including recent archaeological findings like the Bimini Road and the figure of Thoth the Atlantean. Written with the assistance of AI tools. 
10. Job Fishing — $14.99
Advocates for “job fishing” — continuously staying aware of market opportunities and expanding your professional network even while employed, rather than only searching when desperate. The book offers detailed LinkedIn profile guidance, salary negotiation strategies (always negotiate before sending your resume to a recruiter), practical tips on avoiding age discrimination, and insights into the “at will” employment reality in the US. A core argument is that being employed while job hunting gives you freedom, credibility, and negotiating power. 
11. World Immigration, Hunger and Jobs Solution — $14.99
Proposes a concrete program to reduce large-scale global migration by training immigrants and partially funding their return home to start businesses. The funding model is a four-way split: the receiving country, the home country, the UN/crowdfunding, and the returning individual. Mora suggests $5,000–$15,000 per project is sufficient to launch a business, with expenses tracked via credit card for accountability. The goal is to create jobs for adults and education for children at the source, rather than just absorbing migrants abroad. 
12. All on Sports — $14.99
A guide for young athletes and their parents, drawing from the author’s family’s experiences in swimming, tennis, and triathlon. It centers on a “CS Diagram” placing the coach at the core. Topics include coaching philosophy, sports psychology and mental toughness, motivation, strategy, technique, nutrition (what to eat and avoid before practice), physical therapy and injury management, and a “Modified Gym” concept — exercises that mirror sport-specific movements to improve performance without injury. 
13. 17 Things for 17 Somethings — $14.99
A practical life guide for young adults covering the real-world skills schools rarely teach. Topics include: saving money and responsible credit use, reading and modifying contracts, recognizing phone and online scams, assessing trustworthiness, negotiation tactics, understanding mortgages and credit scores, buying cars strategically, protecting personal privacy (including GDPR awareness), and job interview and salary negotiation skills — all grounded in the author’s personal experiences. 
That’s the full library — 13 books spanning philosophy, civilization theory, career strategy, finance, sports, immigration, history, and AI. A remarkably wide range from one author.




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