Julio Biason
5 years ago
1 changed files with 56 additions and 0 deletions
@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ |
|||||||
|
+++ |
||||||
|
title = "Horus Rising - Dan Abnett" |
||||||
|
date = 2019-10-30 |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
[taxonomies] |
||||||
|
tags = ["en-au", "books", "reviews", "warhammer 40000", "dan abnett"] |
||||||
|
+++ |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
[Goodreads Summary](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/625603.Horus_Rising): |
||||||
|
After thousands of years of expansion and conquest, the imperium of man is at |
||||||
|
its height. His dream for humanity nearly accomplished, the emperor hands over |
||||||
|
the reins of power to his warmaster, Horus, and heads back to Terra. But is |
||||||
|
Horus strong enough to control his fellow commanders and continue the |
||||||
|
emperor's grand design? |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
<!-- more --> |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
{{ stars(stars=2) }} |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I hate to say something like this, but you know that messed up fan made story |
||||||
|
with Gordon Freeman, in which there is mostly no punctuation and it’s really |
||||||
|
absurd? |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
That’s what I felt when I read the intro of the book. And that feeling stuck |
||||||
|
with me for the whole book. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
This book came from a Humble Bundle pack and that’s why I didn’t have any |
||||||
|
previous experience with the Warhammer 40,000 universe. But jumping into this |
||||||
|
book (which is part of a larger series, as far as I know) is not a great way |
||||||
|
to get into it. The fact that the intro is really into the absurd (even if the |
||||||
|
book universe is absurd) just makes it a worse experience all over. Whoever |
||||||
|
came with this decision was not someone smart. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The story is more about Loken, a captain that raises from the lower castes |
||||||
|
into a well known captain (or so I get by the excerpts we get from the past) |
||||||
|
and more much about Horus himself. It feels so weird that it seems more like |
||||||
|
someone calling “Shadow of the Giant”, which is a book focused on Bean, |
||||||
|
“Ender’s Game”. Although there is some overlap between the stories, in which |
||||||
|
Bean finds and fights along Ender, the book is in no way about Ender. The same |
||||||
|
thing goes here. More focus on the titular character would be better, or call |
||||||
|
this book “Loken’s Vision” or whatever. It not “Horus Rising” when it is just |
||||||
|
a sideline character. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Also, the long descriptions of Horus, pointing how beautiful and with a great |
||||||
|
body and some mystical aura around it, doesn't help liking the character. How |
||||||
|
can you like someone that everybody thinks is the perfect example of humanity? |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
It also feels like too many ideas where cobbled together for the book. There |
||||||
|
isn’t an spinal story that keeps the book together, they are simply different |
||||||
|
moments in Loken’s life — which, again, gives me the feeling that using “Horus |
||||||
|
Rising” as a name was a bad choice. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
So you have a book about a character that should be the main character but |
||||||
|
it’s a secondary one, in a universe poorly presented and with some bad pacing. |
||||||
|
I wouldn’t blame any fellow Humble Bundle purchasers if they decided to drop |
||||||
|
the series altogether after this. |
Loading…
Reference in new issue