
Lenses, Light, and the Infinite Night
A History of the Telescope and Our Ever-Expanding View of the Cosmos
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Pierce Jumper

This title uses virtual voice narration
About this listen
From Galileo’s humble spyglass to spaceborne observatories that glimpse the edge of time, this is the epic story of how humanity learned to see the universe.
For over 400 years, the telescope has reshaped not just astronomy, but our very understanding of our place in the cosmos. Lenses, Light, and the Infinite Night traces the sweeping, often surprising history of this revolutionary instrument—from the dim candlelit workshops of the Renaissance to the golden mirrors of James Webb and the continent-spanning radio eyes that captured a black hole.
Told with rich detail and poetic clarity, this book weaves together science, invention, cultural shifts, and the bold personalities who dared to look up and question everything. Meet the artisans who ground lenses by hand, the women who measured the stars from glass plates, and the engineers who turned entire mountainsides into galactic sentinels.
Inside, readers will discover:
The forgotten innovators of medieval optics
Galileo’s explosive discoveries and their cultural consequences
The rise of observatories and the age of astronomer-explorers
The silent revolution of astrophotography and space telescopes
The unfolding future of mega-arrays, adaptive optics, and gravitational wave detection
More than a scientific history, this is a human story—of wonder, risk, error, correction, and triumph. It is a celebration of our longest gaze outward—and the questions we’re only beginning to ask.
Whether you’re a stargazer, a science teacher, a student of history, or simply someone who’s ever paused beneath the stars, Lenses, Light, and the Infinite Night will leave you looking up—with deeper awe and clearer sight.