Armchair fiction presents extra-large paperback editions of the best in classic science fiction novels. “The Light in the Sky” by Herbert Clock and Eric Boetzel is the 41st installment of our "Lost World-Lost Race Classics" series. Invaded by the Spanish, Tizoc and his people were forced to flee. With his people’s numbers so few, there was no hope of fighting back. Their home, as they once knew it, was destroyed. So they fled blindly into the bowels of the earth. Stranded in a deep cave with no means of survival, Tizoc’s people needed a miracle—and they got it. With the help of his scientists, Tizoc was able to use sunlight in ways never thought possible. New inventions and resources were cultivated; babies were soon born to a long, promising life and people stayed younger longer. The cave, once known to them as a pit of death and despair, became their paradise with the aid of Tizoc’s fantastic inventions. But, as with most inventors, Tizoc eventually became much too ambitious. Would those far-reaching ambitions cause everything he had built to come crashing down upon him and his people?
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