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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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Parking Signs
Saturday, September 17 2011, 09:50 PM

For strange and complicated writing reasons, I've been doing Google image searches on "confusing parking signs".  The results have been OK, but not spectacular.  I haven't yet found something that makes me sit up and make strange noises.   

And, frankly, if I don't find something confusing, it has to be pretty straightforward.   I'm easily confused.  It's my curse.

Have you ever seen one of those light poles with half a dozen parking signs attached to it, each announcing a different admonition?  Where figuring out what is allowed, and when, is harder than parallel parking?

(Yes.  I'm terrible at parallel parking.  I admit it.  I was quite good at it during the two weeks prior to my drivers test.)

 

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Comments (2)
untitled - Alex Brown, Sunday, September 18 2011, 02:07 AM
Drive in a major city for long enough and you learn to ignore any and all signs. I park wherever I damn well please and just assume that it's peachy.

In San Francisco, the general rule is 4am-6pm you'll get a ticket regardless of where you park, unless it's in crazy expensive garage. From 6pm-4am it's a free for all and chaos ensues - it's simply a matter of deciding that something is a parking space and going for it while ignoring all laws of physics, civility, and sanity.

untitled - DMS, Monday, September 19 2011, 08:22 AM
There is an episode of Top Gear where James May talks to a lady who designs confusing road signs. I can't remember if there were parking specific ones.

We did see one in Beijing that was confusing enough for us to take a picture of and ask the hotel staff about. They didn't know. I've decided it means no exploding cars. If I run across the image, I'll send it to you.

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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.