I'm not sure which versions this writer is referring to.
The author of Genesis is unknown, but believed to be Moses.
"The Lord
Jesus Himself and the
Gospel writers said that the
Law was given by
Moses (
Mark 10:3;
Luke 24:27;
John 1:17), and the uniform tradition of the Jewish
scribes and early Christian fathers, and the conclusion of conservative scholars to the present day, is that Genesis was written by
Moses."
Who wrote the first book of the Bible - Genesis? • ChristianAnswers.Net
"Noah appears in Genesis 5:29 as the son of Lamech and ninth in descent from Adam. In the story of the
Deluge (Genesis 6:11–9:19), he is represented as the patriarch who, because of his blameless piety, was chosen by God to perpetuate the
human race after his wicked contemporaries had perished in the Flood. A righteous man, Noah “found favour in the eyes of the Lord” (Genesis 6:8). Thus, when God beheld the corruption of the earth and determined to destroy it, he gave Noah divine warning of the impending disaster and made a
covenant with him, promising to save him and his family. Noah was instructed to build an
ark, and in accordance with God’s instructions he took into the ark male and female specimens of all the world’s species of animals, from which the stocks might be replenished. Consequently, according to this narrative, the entire surviving human race descended from Noah’s three sons. Such a genealogy sets a universal frame within which the subsequent role of
Abraham, as the father of Israel’s faith, could assume its proper dimensions.
The story of the Flood has close
affinities with
Babylonian traditions of apocalyptic floods in which
Utnapishtim plays the part corresponding to that of Noah. These mythologies are the source of such features of the biblical Flood story as the building and provisioning of the ark, its flotation, and the subsidence of the waters, as well as the part played by the human protagonist. Tablet XI of the
Gilgamesh epic introduces Utnapishtim, who, like Noah, survived cosmic destruction by heeding divine instruction to build an ark.
The religious meaning of the Flood is conveyed after Noah’s heroic survival. He then built an altar on which he offered burnt sacrifices to God, who then bound himself to a pact never again to curse the earth on man’s account. God then set a rainbow in the sky as a visible guarantee of his promise in this covenant. God also renewed his commands given at creation but with two changes: man could now kill animals and eat meat, and the murder of a man would be punished by men.
Despite the
tangible similarities of the Mesopotamian and biblical
myths of the flood, the biblical story has a unique Hebraic perspective. In the Babylonian story the destruction of the flood was the result of a disagreement among the gods; in Genesis it resulted from the
moral corruption of human history. The primitive polytheism of the Mesopotamian versions is transformed in the biblical story into an affirmation of the omnipotence and
benevolence of the one righteous God. Again, following their survival, Utnapishtim and his wife are admitted to the circle of the immortal gods; but Noah and his family are commanded to undertake the renewal of history."
Noah | biblical figure
I would go with the version where Noah releases the raven first and then the dove. I had a discussion about it here --
Verifiable evidence for creationism?.
Why did Noah release a raven? Why did he later release a dove (Genesis 8)?