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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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This Machine Is Not Responding
Thursday, April 7 2011, 12:49 PM

Well, gosh.  This is something neat on a dreary Thursday: thanks to this morning's Google Alerts, I've learned that somebody wrote a nifty little poem based on the Milkweed Triptych.

How's that for a lovely compliment?  I'm amazed that anybody would feel compelled to take up a pen and compose verse after reading Bitter Seeds.  Wow.

The poet, David A Marcillo, has graciously consented to let me post his poem here.

The Coldest War, by David A Marcillo

General Jack Frost is done with the nipping.
He gnaws, thrashes, and batters our noses,
leaving us panting like dogs at the frozen air.
The icy skies manage to burn us inside and out,
a juxtaposition we didn't consider.

The Kremlin suffers from Jack too,
but they're better prepared.
He pays them much longer visits in their homes,
a houseguest who lingers a bit longer than expected
is much preferred over one who arrives without notice.

We created the General, but now we can't control him,
we bred this dog, never thought he would turn on us,
shaking off restraints, breaking free of his muzzle.
Perhaps sentience in human creation was something
we should have studied, something we could have prevented.

General Jack now controls our attacks,
prevents our retreats.
He cuts a path in his blizzard,
storm torn asunder like the Red Sea
creating a sunny and relatively toasty
twenty degrees.

That is the path we travel,
tanks and soldiers on foot,
birds in the sky must follow
Jack's newfound volition.
Like a child developing coherent thought
then enveloping the world in his games,
he has brought us all to a chilling realization:

This Coldest War has become more than us,
Kremlin and Eagle become meaningless
in the arctic blue eyes of our machine,
created to win the war, but spiraled out of control,
a frozen waterspout tearing through our ranks
and throwing Reds wherever they may fall.

This machine is not responding.
This machine is powered by volition.

(©2011 by David A Marcillo; reposted with permission from the author)

Thank you, David!

Speaking of poems, it wasn't until I'd finished writing the third Milkweed book, Necessary Evil, that I learned about "Dreamland" by Edgar Allen Poe.  I almost wonder if I didn't stumble across this a long time ago.  Perhaps it somehow got lodged in my subconscious, where it lay dormant, quietly influencing me for who knows how many years until I wrote the Milkweed books.  I know I wasn't consciously aware of the poem.  But check out this first verse:

By a route obscure and lonely,
Haunted by ill angels only,
Where an Eidolon, named NIGHT,
On a black throne reigns upright,
I have reached these lands but newly
From an ultimate dim Thule-
From a wild clime that lieth, sublime,
Out of SPACE- out of TIME.

If I had been consciously aware of this poem, I would have tried to find a way to work it into the books.  Huh.

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Comments (4)
untitled - Melinda, Thursday, April 7 2011, 01:34 PM
This is all totally made of cool. Compliments to both David and Poe.

nice - Steve Halter, Thursday, April 7 2011, 05:17 PM
Both poems are pretty cool. Has David seen The Coldest War?

The Poe poem is clearly a sign that you should write another trilogy of some sort. :-)

Re: nice - Ian, Thursday, April 7 2011, 09:49 PM
Unless David managed to bribe somebody in my critgroup, I don't think he has seen the second book. His lovely poem is a perceptive interpretation of Bitter Seeds, or so it seems to me...

Re: nice - Steve Halter, Thursday, April 7 2011, 09:59 PM
Yes, definitely. "This machine is powered by volition." I quite like that line (among the others). Coolness.

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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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