RB3 Audio Solutions has narrated 3 audiobooks on Listento.it by 2 authors. The most-rated is The Infancy Gospels of Jesus: His Life From Birth to Twelve Years of Age.

Using texts from ancient and controversial discoveries, the missing years of Jesus are uncovered, revealing a young man's struggle between childhood and godhood. Jesus the child, the boy, the man, and the messiah are all seen in documents spanning from the time of his birth to his crucifixion. Now, the missing years in the life of Jesus are told through these hotly contested books and letters. Sources used in this investigation include: The Infancy Gospel of the Savior, The Book of James or Protevangelium, The Infancy Gospel of Thomas, The History of Joseph the Carpenter, letters letween Pilate and Seneca, letters between Pilate and Herod, letters between Pilate and Tiberius Caesar, The Life of Saint Issa (Jesus), and The Book of Luke.
©2009 Joseph Lumpkin (P)2020 Joseph Lumpkin

In 1894, Nicolas Notovitch published a book called The Unknown Life of Christ. He was a Russian doctor who journeyed extensively throughout Afghanistan, India, and Tibet. During one of his journeys, he was visiting Leh, the capital of Ladakh, near the Buddhist convent Himis. There, Notovitch was told of an ancient record of the life of Jesus known as The Life of St. Issa. Notovitch enlisted a member of his party to translate the Tibetan volumes, while he carefully noted each verse in the back pages of his journal. This is the story of Jesus and his journey through the East during the period called The Missing Years of Jesus.
©2012 Joseph B. Lumpkin (P)2020 Joseph B. Lumpkin

This book contains The Arabic Infancy Gospel, The Infancy Gospel of Thomas, and The Infancy Book of James, or Protevangelium. Together with the Holy Bible, these books provide vivid accounts of the life of Jesus from the time of his conception to his 12 birthday. God is born in human form. Ultimate power and authority reside in the hands of a child. Early Christians looked at their own children as they played, argued, loved, and fought and wondered what it would have been like to raise the Son of God. How would Jesus have acted as a baby, a toddler, a child, or a teenager? How human was this “God-child,” Jesus? Did he have the failings of their own children? Was he selfish and rash at the age of one? Was his stage of the “terrible twos” as horrible a stage as most? If Jesus were a normal youngster what would the outcome have been? For those who found themselves in the path of the young God’s temper tantrum, devastating consequences, death or disfigurement could have followed. Questions surrounding the nature of Jesus challenged the minds of Christians from the very beginning of the faith. Did Jesus mature and grow in wisdom, as most young men should? Did he discover his path in life and his calling or was he perfect and mature from the time of his birth? The Bible reports that the child Jesus “grew strong in spirit.” Did that mean he was weaker in spirit as a child? These are the questions writers of early Christianity sought to address.
©2012 Joseph B. Lumpkin (P)2020 Joseph B. Lumpkin