beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
(Yes, I do actually have an Egoboo File. It's in the basement.)

Gary Westfahl of the University of California at Riverside, a science fiction critic whose work I have often admired, quoted our 1977 filksong "Home on Lagrange" in his 1996 book Islands in the Sky: The Space Station Theme in Science Fiction Literature. This I learned because there is a new paperback edition, which has been swallowed by Google Books.

Our parody is offered as evidence that stories of space stations often invoke the American frontier. Read the relevant passage here.

We originally wrote it to poke fun at the grandiose proclamations of prophets advocating space colonies. The title pun (about Lagrange points in celestial mechanics) motivated us more than the connection between a cowboy song and the space-type frontier. But the song does express a manifest-destiny approach to the wide-open spaces, so I can't disagree that it's relevant...

Turning to another bit of egoboo, yesterday at North Central College's Oesterle Library I participated in an event celebrating 400 years since Galileo first turned his telescope to the heavens; you can read about it in today's Daily Herald. A new NASA image combining views of the Milky Way's center from three different space telescopes was unveiled.


More photos behind cut )
Photos by Thomas Gill, courtesy of North Central College.

The affair was a great success. About 70 people showed up to hear about astronomy on a Tuesday afternoon. The Oesterle's Emily Prather-Rodgers was mistress of ceremonies. Three faculty members, Richard Wilders, Michael de Brauw, and John Zenchak, gave fine talks about Galileo and his work. Visitors examined the library's first edition of Galileo's Dialogo and peered through a modern copy of his first telescope. My job was to give context to the Milky Way picture and explain a little about the objects it reveals. I had a grand time.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Shopping for a book about resveratrol? This looks like a good one.

The August 2006 issue of Clinical Chemistry features a review by David M. Goldberg, of the Banting Institute at the University of Toronto, of the book Resveratrol in Health and Disease, edited by B. Aggarwal and S. Shishodia.

The good parts:

It is the paradox of promise and uncertainty surrounding resveratrol that makes this volume so welcome and timely. The editors have explored every nook and cranny of their territory. In doing so, they have assembled an excellent team of contributors whose writing is clear, rarely dull, and often accompanied by exemplary illustrations. Several of the pioneers and leaders of the field are represented: John Pezzuto by a chapter on carcinogenesis that is a masterpiece spanning 150 pages, Barry Gehm by a chapter on the estrogenic effects of resveratrol that is shorter but highly informative, and Alberto Bertelli by the final chapter, describing resveratrol's pharmacokinetics and metabolism.

Yup. Pioneers and leaders of the field. That's my boy.

Goldberg concludes with this:

A decade from now, we are virtually certain to discover that only a modest proportion of its putative benefits are actually deliverable to suffering humanity; there is no way to tell from this book which of those benefits these are likely to be. However, as a superbly presented account of a volcano of knowledge in the midst of erupting, this book can be thoroughly recommended. The readers of this journal will not find its concepts and vocabulary unfamiliar, even if they will be encountering Polygonum cuspidatum, resveratrol’s most prolific plant source, for the first time.


So would The Heterodyne Boys and the Erupting Volcano of Knowledge be a good title for a book?

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beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
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