Trillium series
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The Trillium series is a series of five fantasy novels by Marion Zimmer Bradley, Julian May, and Andre Norton set in the World of the Three Moons. The series title is unofficial and is used solely because every novel of the series had the word "trillium" in its title. The concept of trillium or trinity plays an important role in the novels, probably because there were three authors working on it. However, it should be noted that only the first book of the series, Black Trillium, was created by all three of them, while the other four have been written separately.
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[edit] Novels
- Black Trillium (1990, by Marion Zimmer Bradley, Julian May, and Andre Norton)
- Blood Trillium (1992, by Julian May)
- Golden Trillium (1993, by Andre Norton)
- Lady of the Trillium (1995, by Marion Zimmer Bradley)
- Sky Trillium (1997, by Julian May)
[edit] Authors
The idea of a story of three princesses, who were robbed of their kingdom and try to survive in a hostile world, originally belonged to a German literature agent Uwe Luserke in 1989. According to his vision, three of the most notable fantasy authors of the time would come together and collaborate to produce a novel describing three different life stories that are bound together by a single A-Plot. However, his plans were very difficult to realize since popular authors seldom agree to collaborate with someone.
Never the less, Luserke managed to get Andre Norton, famous for her Witch World series, on his side and together they have found the second collaborator - Marion Zimmer Bradley (The Mists of Avalon), who was a friend of Norton. As for the third, Luserke's attempt to stir Anne McCaffrey's (Dragonriders of Pern series) interest in his project was a failure, so he tried his luck with Julian May (Saga of Pliocene Exile). At first, May considered his letter a joke, but after some negotiations, she agreed to think about it.
May wrote her own vision of the story, called Black Trillium, and to her astonishment, Norton, Bradley and even Luserke himself agreed to it. Moreover, Bantam Books immediately agreed to publish the novel and decided to buy the rights for it. Uwe Luserke was so happy that his plan might come into reality that he didn't even mind that May slightly changed nearly all details of his story. After the initial meeting, where primary cast of characters and many small details of the setting were decided upon, all three authors worked separately, sharing the material via post and Internet.
According to the plan, each one of the three authors was to write a story of one princess: Bradley chose the intellectual eldest sister, Haramis, Norton - the Amazon-like warrior princess Kadiya, and May was entrusted with the youngest sister, Anigel. However, the collaboration has turned out really frustrating for all of them, for various reasons, therefore after the novel was finished in 1990, it was decided that eventual sequels should better be written completely separately.
In the end, Julian May has written two sequels, Blood Trillium and Sky Trillium, and Norton and Bradley wrote one each - Golden Trillium and Lady of the Trillium, respectively.
[edit] Continuity issues
The only truly canonical part of the series is the first one, Black Trillium, written by all three authors together. The other four were created by them separately and therefore often contradict the works of other authors. Blood Trillium, Golden Trillium and Lady of the Trillium are all direct sequels to Black Trillium, while Sky Trillium is a sequel to Blood Trillium. Zimmer's Lady of the Trillium is set 900 years after the first novel and contains very few contradictions to Golden Trillium by Norton, however, both novels go totally against the continuity of May's Blood and Sky Trilliums.
The best approach on the books is therefore to consider Norton's (BT - GT), Zimmer's (BT - LotT), and May's (BT - BT - ST) series completely separate sets of novels. However, as already stated above, Lady of the Trillium does not contradict Golden Trillium, thus, both novels can be considered parts of one continuity.
Another detail worth noticing is that both Norton and Zimmer wrote only about their respective heroines (Kadya and Haramis) in their sequel novels, whereas May continued the stories of all three princesses in hers.