
Dianne Timblin
Dianne Timblin is past book review editor for American Scientist and author of the poetry chapbook A History of Fire (Three Count Pour, 2013). Her ongoing series of lo-fi collages may be found at The Art of Salvage.
Content By Author
Article
- Picture Perfect
- Big Data and Democracy
- Cool Customers
- The World Through a Red Lens
- Sumptuous Science
- Adventures in a Less Fretful Cosmos
- Of Atoms and Anvils
- Thoreau as Naturalist: A Conversation with Four Authors
- An Illness Observed: A Conversation with Julie Rehmeyer
- Before the Selfie Stick
- Torchbearers
- Adventures of a Spacefaring Feline
- No Rust for the Weary
- Owls in the Family
- Birth of the Coolth
- If These Cubicles Could Talk
- Tilling Tales
- Of a Feather
- Have You Seen This Species?
- Living Color
- "The Sight That Met Us Was Shocking"
- Keeping the Holmes Fires Burning
Blog
- Summer STEM Reads 2018
- In Deep: Deepwater Well Control
- Neuroscience as Neuroart
- New Reading for a New Year, 2018
- Science Gift Guide 2017
- STEM Books for Adult and Young Adult Readers 2017
- STEM Books for Young Readers 2017
- STEM Wish List 2017
- Recommended Reading: On Thoreau, Science, and Culture
- Thoreau at 200
- All Paths Considered
- A Digital Menagerie from The Paper Zoo
- A Two-Dimensional Zoo
- STEM Books for Older Children 2016
- STEM Reads 2016
- STEM Picture Books 2016
- STEM Wish List 2016
- STEM Books for Young Children 2016
- Professor Astro Cat Goes Digital
- Surveillance, Privacy, and Security on the Internet
- The Making of a Xenotext
- Exploring The Dark Net with Author Jamie Bartlett
- Discussing Rare Desert Species with Author Christopher Norment
- The Persistence of Memory: John Rosenthal's Photographs of the Lower Ninth Ward
- When the Man in the Moon Met the Men on the Moon: Part 1
- The Cool Factor: Air Conditioning's History in Images
- Celebrate Indie Bookstore Day with 6 Books from Indie Publishers
- A Fool’s Errand: Writing Science Spoofs to Enthrall, Not Annoy
- “Fascinating, Jim”: 9 Movies for a SciFi Icon’s Birthday
- Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Robotic Arm