I'll have to agree with some people here on this one, it will be very difficult to do such a thing.
If things I say have already been mentioned I'm sorry, but I'd rather restate them they say refer to what that guy said.
Indeed they will have to be in different boxes, but I don't think this needs to be stated, I have yet to see someone even try a box with two different sized subs. Reason being should be pretty obviously, Completely different tones result in different vibrations going through the same box, and other complications that will affect sound.
I Suggest that you face the 13 toward the back of the trunk, and the 10s aligned along the side upward toward the backseat, or at 45 - 90 degrees out from facing the trunk.
The largest problem is going to be that the 13 is going to push a lot more air and be far louder than the others. Also, if the trunk is too small the amount of air inside will screw with it a bit too, although with a blazer im sure there won't be a problem. You will undoubtedly have to do a lot of work to get the 15 and 10s equalized. I've set up a 15 and 2 10s and that took me about 1 hour to sound decent, and even after that I wasn't really proud of the sound, but he loved it.
What I had to do was use capacitors in the signal wire to cut off frequencies below around what was 50 or so, and I let the 15 play normal. You'll notice some 4,3,and 2 way speakers will have small capacitors in them, it does this function.
Whoever said it is also right that there is a cutoff point, the crossover won't just immediately stop at 45, so you should probably either find a set of capacitors to do the work for that if you know how to use them (and of course fairly strong capacitors for a sub) or mess with a few equalizers or stagers.
Also what amplifiers are you going to use to run this setup? are you splitting the subwoofer output RCAs? or are you splitting left and right, or connecting the output of one amp to the input of another?
To answer the other person's question, asking why you'd use more than 1 sized sub to cover the spectrum is like asking why component speakers exist.
The fewer notes a woofer (subsonic or non) has to play, the more accurate it is going to be, and a slightly higher SPL may even result.
Imagine a speaker working it's *** off to play the bass drum, snare, hi hat, guitar, synth, ambience, and all other noises in a song, compared to just a mellow hum of lets say 6K hertz. It's going to perform far better at just playing 6K.
As for your setup, there might be a program out there to help you online for setting up your trunk for different sized subs, depending on the size and coverage of your trunk.
All in all i'd much rather pay someone else to tune it though, it's far too complicated to actually enjoy doing IMO.
But good luck, I hope I was at least somewhat helpful.