Vuron
02-08-2010, 10:11 PM
Rynn's World
Author: Anthony Reynolds (Dark Apostle, Dark Disciple
Series: Word Bearers
Starring/Perspective: Marduk, Kol Badur, Burias, Ekodas, Erebus (special guest star), the Word Bearers
Antagonists: White Consols, the White Angel, Necrontyr
Locales: Boros Gate, Daemon World of Sicarus
Snarky synopsis: Putting the Words "Holy Sh!t" in Word Bearers
Recently I received Sons of Dorn (about my favorite Space Marine chapter - the Imperial Fists) and Dark Creed. I read Sons of Dorn first and then reluctantly read about the diabolic villians - the Word Bearers. The first two books (Dark Apostle, Dark Disciple) were decent - but nothing to rave about. However those books were merely prelude for Dark Creed.
Without a doubt my favorite BL book is Storm of Iron by Graham McNeill. I love that book because of its epic scope and the dual perspective (Imperial Fists/Imperial v. Iron Warriors) of a massive battle. The scope of Dark Creed makes Storm of Iron look like a couple of kids hitting each other with sticks on a playground. The scope of the book is massive - likely the most ambitious theatre of battle by any author this side of the city siege books in the Gaunt's Ghosts series (Necropolis, Sabbat Martyr). Now I don't think Dark Creed is as good as Storm of Iron, Necropolis or Sabbat Martyr, however hats off to Reynolds for trying to tackle space battles, land and air battle between thousands of chaos space marines, an Ultramarines successor chapter, a legion of Necrons and millions of IG.
The basic plot is that the Boros Gate system is a gateway into the warp where rapid transit is possible between any number of destinations in realtime. Marduk leads his cadre (with characters from the first two novels) as part of a massive Word Bearers flotilla to conquer the system in advance of the 13th Black Crusade (where are my 13th Black Crusade series of novels BL?!). I am not going to spoil anything but suffice to say this is the best BL novel I have read in at least 6 months (including that Gaunt's Ghost short story I purchased as a hardback). The pace begins about 40 pages in and does not let up. The battles are expertly told and there are many twists and turns along the way.
Usually BL books are fire and forget - you read them once and never go back. This book is going in the very small camp of "going to read again." The only major detractor is that you have to read two novels to get to it - but the Return of the Jedi aspect of this one makes it worthwhile.
Overall: 4 Books of Lorgar out of 5
Author: Anthony Reynolds (Dark Apostle, Dark Disciple
Series: Word Bearers
Starring/Perspective: Marduk, Kol Badur, Burias, Ekodas, Erebus (special guest star), the Word Bearers
Antagonists: White Consols, the White Angel, Necrontyr
Locales: Boros Gate, Daemon World of Sicarus
Snarky synopsis: Putting the Words "Holy Sh!t" in Word Bearers
Recently I received Sons of Dorn (about my favorite Space Marine chapter - the Imperial Fists) and Dark Creed. I read Sons of Dorn first and then reluctantly read about the diabolic villians - the Word Bearers. The first two books (Dark Apostle, Dark Disciple) were decent - but nothing to rave about. However those books were merely prelude for Dark Creed.
Without a doubt my favorite BL book is Storm of Iron by Graham McNeill. I love that book because of its epic scope and the dual perspective (Imperial Fists/Imperial v. Iron Warriors) of a massive battle. The scope of Dark Creed makes Storm of Iron look like a couple of kids hitting each other with sticks on a playground. The scope of the book is massive - likely the most ambitious theatre of battle by any author this side of the city siege books in the Gaunt's Ghosts series (Necropolis, Sabbat Martyr). Now I don't think Dark Creed is as good as Storm of Iron, Necropolis or Sabbat Martyr, however hats off to Reynolds for trying to tackle space battles, land and air battle between thousands of chaos space marines, an Ultramarines successor chapter, a legion of Necrons and millions of IG.
The basic plot is that the Boros Gate system is a gateway into the warp where rapid transit is possible between any number of destinations in realtime. Marduk leads his cadre (with characters from the first two novels) as part of a massive Word Bearers flotilla to conquer the system in advance of the 13th Black Crusade (where are my 13th Black Crusade series of novels BL?!). I am not going to spoil anything but suffice to say this is the best BL novel I have read in at least 6 months (including that Gaunt's Ghost short story I purchased as a hardback). The pace begins about 40 pages in and does not let up. The battles are expertly told and there are many twists and turns along the way.
Usually BL books are fire and forget - you read them once and never go back. This book is going in the very small camp of "going to read again." The only major detractor is that you have to read two novels to get to it - but the Return of the Jedi aspect of this one makes it worthwhile.
Overall: 4 Books of Lorgar out of 5