Ah Vampires, how pop culture has thoroughly wrecked you, emasculated you, and pimped you out for the twisted erotic vibes of a lost generation to addled to see what you really are.
One of the things I adore about the Warhammer universe (at least the fiction published up till a year or so ago) was the uncompromising nature of evil. If something was evil, in Warhammer, it was really damned evil. In the world of Warhammer Fantasy, Vampires are what they always were and should be: pure evil.
Not the modern, effeminate shades of soft porn that most modern 'vampires' have been twisted into, Warhammer Fantasy Vampires are demonic beasts who see human beings as little more than protein sources, and who have an unquenchable thirst for secular power and military conquest. Though they can, and mostly do, take human form, and are invariably handsome or gorgeous, suave, masculine or ladylike, sophisticated and incredibly well educated, they are also entirely convinced of their superiority as a species.
They are the ultimate racists.
Inheritance is the first book in a trilogy devoted to the Von Carstein family of Vampires, family of Vampire Counts who rule the province of Sylvania from their capital of Drakenhof, and who yearn to destroy the Empire and tear down the rule of the followers of Sigmar.
Though this book started slow, with a slow burn build to it's great reveal nearly a third of the way in, it was done quite well. The author did a bang up job of building the tension, and otherworldly darkness of Sylvania, before unleashing the armies of undead, wraiths, ghouls and vampires on the Empire. Vlad von Carstein was mostly well written, as was his insane wife Isabella, though neither made enough appearances in the book for in depth character development.
At times the books pacing was an issue, epic military contests immediately followed by a side story or quest that was often akin to throwing the engine of the story in reverse speaks either to Mr. Saville's age as a writer, or a lack of quality editing.
Regardless the book was enjoyable and is a very good start to what will hopefully be a great series.
Black Library has recently reprinted these as an omnibus in their Warhammer Chronicles line of reprints and repackaging efforts, so this is again available. (Which is good, my used copies are a bit worn...)
3 and a half stars, though I rounded up to spark interest in a story that tells Vampires as they really are.
Good story with a great blend of horror, dark fantasy, and epic military action.