Lady Rhian reviews Eisenhorn by Dan Abnett, a Warhammer 40K Omnibus

LadyRhian

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Gregor Eisenhorn is a Inquisitor in the Warhammer 40,000 universe, serving the God-Emperor and protecting his people from the machinations of the fiends that serve chaos, who are always hovering, trying to worm their way into the Empire, even through those who are supposed to serve the Emperor.

Eisenhorn's battles with the ultimate Evils of Chaos and the Warp serve as the subjects for three major books (Separately published under the titles of Xenos, Malleus and Hereticus), and two short linking stories that tie the three tales together. In them, Gregor goes from a young and eager Inquisitor who holds himself to the highest, most scrupulous standards of behavior, to someone who is far less scrupulous and aboveboard in his methods of enforcing orthodoxy and overcoming chaos and evil, while still remaining an effective Inquisitor.

Of course, he cannot do it alone. Gregor travels with an entire group of characters who provide him with help and support, from Midas Betancore who acts as his personal pilot, to Aemos, who is a researcher who comes close to being a human data retrieval machine. Along the way, he picks up and loses help at a phenomenal rate, with two female combat experts being blown away from under him right at the beginning of both Xenos and Malleus. The second, Arianrhod, leaves behind her family's saber, Barbarisater, to remember her by, and it is this weapon that is instrumental in the downfall of the Chaos-creature Cherubael later on in the book.

Eisenhorn also takes a great deal of toll on his friends and allies. Ravenor, his student, goes from being a strong and vigorous young man to being paralyzed and disfigured, but went from a secondary character to the main character in another series also written by Dan Abnett.

I love Dan Abnett as a writer. He makes you feel both the wonder and the essential bleakness of the Warhammer future in his writing, but unlike some of the other authors who write books for the "Black Library", he also makes you feel for his characters. In a less-talented writer, Eisenhorn could come off as a cold character who you wouldn't care about at all. But Abnett writes him as a very human character for all his cold attitudes and training, one whom you end up caring about deeply.

Indeed, it's not just Eisenhorn who comes in for this sort of treatment, but all of Dan Abnett's characters, from Eisenhorn to Ravenor, to Ibram Gaunt, or Gaunt's Ghosts. They may be powerful in the Warhammer 40K Universe, or as insignificant as gnats, but they become real people that you want to savor and be with as they fight their battles across the Universe.

Dan Abnett remains my favorite writer of all those in the "Black Library", and this huge three-in-one volume provides ample reason as to why.
 

Gildan Bladeborn

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The Eisenhorn trilogy is definitely a classic, and among the better 40K stories I've yet to encounter. Aaron Dembski-Bowden though has lately surpassed Abnett on my personal Black Library author rating scale - if you haven't read Soul Hunter, Cadian Blood, or Helsreach yet you really should; Aaron seems to "get" 40K in a way that other authors haven't, even if they still produce solid stories.
 

LadyRhian

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He's not the only writer I like. I also liked William King's Space Wolf series. And from the original Warhammer, Jack Yeovil's Genevieve Dieudonne, who has since showed up in Kim Newman's Anno Dracula, The Bloody Red Baron and Dracula Cha Cha Cha (which makes sense, since they are the same author writing under two different names). I have The Vampire Genevieve and Beasts in Velvet in my "to be read" pile. And two books about the Blood Angels chapter of the Space Marines as well, Deus Encarmine and Deus Sanguinus.

As yet, I haven't seen Aaron Dembski-Bowden's books in any bookstore near me, but if I see them, I will be sure to give him a try.