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Praise for the
Milkweed Triptych
"A major talent... I can't wait to see more."
—George R. R. Martin
"Mad English warlocks battling twisted Nazi psychics? Yes please, thank you. Tregillis's debut has a white-knuckle plot, beautiful descriptions, and complex characters-- an unstoppable Vickers of a novel."
Cory Doctorow on Bitter Seeds
"Ian Tregillis triumphantly concludes his astonishing, brilliant, pulse-pounding debut trilogy, The Milkweed Triptych."
Cory Doctorow on Necessary Evil
"Tregillis' conclusion of the Milkweed Triptych is the pièce de résistance of the series. Necessary Evil is a perfect marriage of science fiction, fantasy and alternate history."
RT Book Reviews (4.5 stars, Top Pick) on Necessary Evil
"Darkly fascinating…A thoroughly fascinating conclusion to an imaginative tour de force."
Kirkus on Necessary Evil
"A cross between the devious, character-driven spy fiction of early John le Carré and the mad science fantasy of the X-Men... Despite the jaw-dropping backdrop and oblique plotting, the narrative is driven by character and personal circumstance...
Grim indeed, yet eloquent and utterly compelling."
—Kirkus on The Coldest War
"The characters come alive via [Tregillis's] imaginative dialogue and his storyline will keep readers spellbound and on the edge of their seats with an intense sci-fi/alternate history thriller plot."
RT Book Reviews (4.5 stars, Top Pick) on The Coldest War
"Well-drawn characters and a feel for time and place make this an excellent journey into an alternate Britain."
—Library Journal on Bitter Seeds
"Engrossing... Tregillis ably mixes cold war paranoia with his mythology."
Publishers Weekly on The Coldest War
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A Duty to Science
Friday, January 21 2011, 12:05 PM

Reading this article got me thinking about the duties and obligations of being a scientist.

All scientists have a duty to perform their work honestly and ethically.  Ultimately, this obligation springs from the symbiotic relationship between science and society, the give-and-take between scientists and the society in which they partake.

But sometimes science turns around and lays additional obligations upon the intrepid explorer.

Which brings me back to the article.

None of the people who originally designed the Voyager probes ever believe that they would still be functioning, much less returning invaluable scientific data, after 33 years in the cold darkness of outer space.  But that wasn't their mandate.  Their task was to design probes that could function into the late1980s, to survive treks to the outer suburbs of our solar system.  And they succeeded.  Did they ever.

At any point in the following decades, it would have been permissible to accept that the missions had been spectacularly successful, to congratulate all involved, and then…stop listening.  To stop spending that trickle of money on receiver upgrades and manpower to maintain that slender thread of communication with the Voyagers.  I use the word "permissible," but I don't use the word "acceptable".   It would have been a tremendous disservice to science, and to our understanding of the universe around us, if that had happened.

The unprecedented solar wind measurements coming from Voyager 1 right now aren't simply a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.  The unfortunate reality is that they might become a once-in-a-civilization opportunity.  Other probes have made similar, if not as historic, long-distance journeys.  Voyager 2 and the Pioneer probes have all crossed the orbit of Pluto.  Others will leave the solar system in the (far) future.  New Horizons, for instance, will streak through the Kuiper Belt in the next ten years, and eventually head for the great beyond a decade after that.  But how long will it mantain contact with us?  Will it survive its journey unscathed?  The other probes currently in the distant fringes of our solar neighborhood aren't positioned and/or equipped to take these measurements.  Meanwhile Voyager 1 is out there right now and still working—after spending almost as much time in deep space as I've been alive.

Nobody expected this.  And yet it is. 

When I read these investigators' speculations about how the Voyager probes might outlast them, I'm struck by what a strange and unique obligation has been laid upon this dwindling group of scientists.

The people who designed and built Voyager, who trained it and flung it into the void, who kept an ear cocked toward the heavens for all these years, have a duty to keep listening.  To keep squeezing every bit of data from that incomprehensibly distant outpost of humanity.  And somehow they continue to uphold that duty, year in and year out, tirelessly and unfailingly. 

Wow.

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Comments (3)
Thanks for sharing - Susan, Friday, January 21 2011, 06:00 PM
This probably wouldn't have made it onto my radar -- at least not anytime soon -- so thanks for sharing. It's pretty...well...amazing. Both that the probe is still out there and going, and that (luckily) someone is still listening.

Wow is right.

My pleasure - Ian, Friday, January 21 2011, 07:21 PM
I'm glad you enjoyed it. Yeah, I find it pretty amazing, too. Downright touching, in fact.

Poor lonely space probe. But I find a little bit of comfort in knowing that no matter what we do down here, no matter how badly we might screw things up, there's a little bit of us still out there somewhere. Forever.

Until something nasty finds it - Tengland, Saturday, January 22 2011, 01:59 AM
Like some big alien goobers who'll use the info on the laserdisk to come to Earth and invade and have us for dinner as the main course. Or to enslave us. Heh-heh.
OK, that's the SF side of me, extrapolating to ridiculous lengths. The science follower guy in me can only repeat Ian's "wow" and marvel at the success of the program and what those lonely satellites are telling us. The way things are going now they might be the only pieces of us that get beyond our own back yard and let the cosmos know that, once upon a time, there was intelligent (mostly) life here. A pity, but at least we got that far.

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Interviews
Interview with SFX Magazine
Unwalkers interview [English | French ]
Interview with Speculate! Podcast Interview with Adventures in SciFi Publishing
Ian Tregillis on the Sword and Laser Podcast
Ian Tregillis on John Scalzi's The Big Idea
Interview with Pat's Fantasy Hotlist
Interview with SFRevu
Interview with Mad Hatter Book Review
Interview with Apex Books

Interview at Literary Musings Interview with Pat's Fantasy Hotlist
An interview with the authors of Busted Flush at Pat's Fantasy Hotlist
Interview with Travis Heermann at The Write Line
9-way interview with the contributors to the Wild Cards novel Inside Straight at Pat's Fantasy Hotlist
Interview in the February, 2008 newsletter of the Online Writing Workshop for Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror
An extended interview with Ian Tregillis by Ty Franck, on www.wildcardsbooks.com.

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