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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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The Annular Eclipse of 2012
Monday, May 21 2012, 02:35 PM

Yesterday, the first annular solar eclipse in 18 years to be visible from within the United States passed straight over my house (thanks to Steve Halter for that link). 

While a partial eclipse was visible from many parts of the country, the region for viewing a true annular eclipse fell along a long rectangular strip of the western United States.  For those of us in the southwest, the eclipse was even more unusual because it happened during sunset.  The center of the eclipse path happened to slice right through Albuquerque, just a short drive south of me.  So we packed up the lawn chairs, iced tea, and sunscreen, and took a drive. 

We needed to find a spot with good views of the western horizon.  The Albuquerque Astronomical Society had just the place: it's called Mesa del Sol.  How could we resist something so perfect?

The local meda advertised this event pretty heavily.  Thousands of people turned out to witness the eclipse.  (And I wonder how many of them are blind now.  Proper viewing glasses were in short supply yesterday.)  Another popular viewing location with good western views was Balloon Fiesta Park; I heard later that the line to enter the park was over 2 hours long at one point. 

In contrast, Mesa del Sol had free parking, easy access, and plenty of space to spread out.  And killer views.  I'm grateful to Pat Rogers, who made a full-day job of intrepid scouting on Saturday.  It's thanks to Pat that we chose Mesa del Sol, and it couldn't have worked out better.  Even the weather cooperated—absolutely perfect.  Not too warm, not at all windy.  Just a really lovely day all around.

The venue is often used for outdoor concerts:

Somewhat abstract sculpture in the Mesa del Sol parking lot.

But yesterday the amateur astronomers were out in force yesterday, with sun filters and end caps aplenty:

A solar telescope in the parking lot of Mesa del Sol.

A solar telescope in the parking lot of Mesa del Sol.

A solar telescope in the parking lot of Mesa del Sol.

The eclipse also brought out the inner fashionista in many sky watchers:

Welding goggles and a pink top.

Patricia Rogers in fedora and eclipse glasses

Scott Denning stares down the sun.

Scott Denning, Melinda Snodgrass, and some guy.

(Photo by Pat Rogers.)

The full eclipse (from the time the moon first occluded the edge of the sun until it passed completely clear of the sun) lasted for about 2 hours.  The sun set before the whole show was finished.  But we were able to watch the onset of the eclipse all the way through the annular phase.  A cheer went up when the moon slid inside the sun's ring of fire.  It was a long event, and it had the atmosphere of a relaxed day at the beach. 

Eclipse watchers.

Eclipse watchers.

Only 88% of the sun was covered.  That was enough to make the temperature drop noticeably as the eclipse progressed.  Combined with what would have been a brilliant sunset anyway (they're generally pretty good here), the faux twilight had a eerie, soupy, reddish tint to it. 

Pat Rogers took this terrific sequence of photos with a digital camera and a jury-rigged solar filter made from an extra pair of cheap eclipse glasses:

Approaching annularity.

Stay on target.  Stay on target...

The annular phase lasted for almost four and a half minutes.

Crisis averted; the sun reborn.

Sunset

At the very end of the show, the moon occluded part of the sun and the horizon cut off the rest.  The view through my eclipse glasses showed a strange, triangular sun.  It only lasted for a couple of minutes but it was very cool.

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Comments (1)
untitled - Elena, Tuesday, May 22 2012, 10:43 AM
Awesome pictures!! I needed to prepare better to this event... looking forward to the next one, in 2014, and hopefully, the total one, in 2017!

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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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