Bitter Seeds
‘A major talent’ George R. R. Martin
‘A confident and thrilling debut’ SFX
The year is 1939. Raybould Marsh and other members of British Intelligence have gathered to watch a damaged reel of film in a darkened room. It appears to show German troops walking through walls, bursting into flames and hurling tanks into the air from afar.
If the British are to believe their eyes, a Nazi scientist has been endowing German troops with unnatural, unstoppable powers. And Raybould will be forced to resort to dark methods to hold the impending invasion at bay.
But dealing with the occult exacts a price. And that price must be paid in blood.
Bitter Seeds is the first novel in Ian Tregillis’s Milkweed Triptych series – a chilling masterpiece featuring a twentieth century much like our own, but also horrifyingly different.
Praise for Bitter Seeds:
‘A white-knuckle plot, beautiful descriptions, and complex characters – an unstoppable Vickers of a novel’ Cory Doctorow
‘Bitter Seeds may rival Naomi Novik’s Tales of Temeraire as a sustained historical fantasy’ Booklist
‘Tregillis delivers a dynamite first novel’ SFREVU
‘Exciting and intense . . . The clash of magic and science meshes perfectly with the tumultuous setting’ Publishers Weekly
‘Receives my highest recommendations’ SFFWORLD
The Milkweed Triptych
Bitter Seeds
The Coldest War
Necessary Evil
Also by Ian Tregillis:
The Alchemy Wars
The Mechanical
The Rising
The Liberation
‘A confident and thrilling debut’ SFX
The year is 1939. Raybould Marsh and other members of British Intelligence have gathered to watch a damaged reel of film in a darkened room. It appears to show German troops walking through walls, bursting into flames and hurling tanks into the air from afar.
If the British are to believe their eyes, a Nazi scientist has been endowing German troops with unnatural, unstoppable powers. And Raybould will be forced to resort to dark methods to hold the impending invasion at bay.
But dealing with the occult exacts a price. And that price must be paid in blood.
Bitter Seeds is the first novel in Ian Tregillis’s Milkweed Triptych series – a chilling masterpiece featuring a twentieth century much like our own, but also horrifyingly different.
Praise for Bitter Seeds:
‘A white-knuckle plot, beautiful descriptions, and complex characters – an unstoppable Vickers of a novel’ Cory Doctorow
‘Bitter Seeds may rival Naomi Novik’s Tales of Temeraire as a sustained historical fantasy’ Booklist
‘Tregillis delivers a dynamite first novel’ SFREVU
‘Exciting and intense . . . The clash of magic and science meshes perfectly with the tumultuous setting’ Publishers Weekly
‘Receives my highest recommendations’ SFFWORLD
The Milkweed Triptych
Bitter Seeds
The Coldest War
Necessary Evil
Also by Ian Tregillis:
The Alchemy Wars
The Mechanical
The Rising
The Liberation
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Reviews
An excellent first book, and I am eagerly awaiting number two
Tregillis delivers a dynamite first novel in Bitter Seeds
A damned entertaining novel. If Bitter Seeds is any indication of what's to come, then Tregillis will have a fertile writing career. The novel receives my highest recommendations
Bitter Seeds is an incredible debut that Tregillis should be very noted for. It blends a hodgepodge of literary genius, horror, paranormal and history with some amazing dark tones and incredibly believable, tragically flawed characters . . . This is easily one of the most impressive debut works I've read
Bitter Seeds shines in its characters about which we get to care a lot, and in the style which is just superb . . . the one novel of 2010 I would recommend to anyone who believes that speculative fiction cannot compete with "literary" novels
A major talent . . . I can't wait to see more
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
Bitter Seeds is nothing short of an awesome read as far as I'm concerned. It's a testament to what Tregillis has done here that I'm already of the opinion that he keeps writing then I'll keep reading his work. Can you tell I'm excited? Read Bitter Seeds and you'll see why.