The best of new fiction short stories from the Black LibrarySample the best short fiction from Black Library’s monthly magazine, from our most popular established authors and a host of new talent. Available for the first time in print.
Stories Within
A Place of Quiet Assembly • [Gotrek and Felix] • (2012) • novelette by John Brunner Action and Consequence • (2012) • Sarah Cawkwell Aenarion • (2011) • Gav Thorpe Bitter End • (2012) • Sarah Cawkwell Cause and Effect • (2012) • Sarah Cawkwell Charandis • (2012) • Ben McCallum Commander Shadow • (2012) • Braden Campbell Exhumed • [Deathwatch] • (2011) • Steve Parker Feast of Horrors • (2012) • Chris Wraight Flesh • (2012) • Chris Wraight Grail Knight • (2012) • Anthony Reynolds Hunted • (2012) • John French Manbane • (2012) • Andy Hoare Marshlight • (2012) • C. L. Werner Mountain Eater • (2012) • Andy Smillie Primary Instinct • (2011) • Sarah Cawkwell Questing Knight • (2012) • Anthony Reynolds Shadow Knight • (2012) • Aaron Dembski-Bowden Sir Dagobert's Last Battle • (2012) • Jonathan Green Survivor • (2012) • Steve Parker The Arkunasha War • (2012) • Andy Chambers The Barbed Wire Cat • (2012) • Robert Earl The Carrion Anthem • (2012) • David Annandale The Dark Path • (2012) • Gav Thorpe The First Duty • (2012) • Josh Reynolds The Gods Demand • (2011) • Josh Reynolds The Iron Within • [The Horus Heresy] • (2011) • novella by Rob Sanders The Last Charge • (2011) • Andy Hoare The Last Remembrancer • [The Horus Heresy] • (2011) • novelette by John French The Long Games at Carcharias • (2011) • Rob Sanders The Rat Catcher's Tale • (2012) • Richard Ford The Strange Demise of Titus Endor • (2012) • Dan Abnett Tower of Blood • (2012) • Tony Ballantyne Virtue's Reward • (2012) • Darius Hinks Waiting Death • (2011) • Steve Lyons We Are One • (2012) • John French
Wow I finally finished this one! Lol I actually started this book over a year ago, though I only recently added it. I got back to this and really dug in. This book is a collection of the Hammer and Bolter magazine, created by Games Workshop. There are 12 issues in volume 1 and this collection pulls around three average from each issue, making a total of 37 stories. These stories take turns from Warhammer 40k to Warhammer Fantasy, also known as the Old World. The Warhammer Fantasy tales range from the frozen Chaos Wastes in the north, to Grail Knights serving the Lady of the Lake. An Ogre Hunter is featured in one story, and many stories involve mass battles against Chaos, the Vampire Counts, the Undead, etc. The last story involving the old World is a sad tale about Aenerion, the Hand of Khaine, who sacrifices himself to the Bloody Handed God and becomes the doom of the Elves. Now let's talk about Warhammer 40k. There are tales about several different Space Marine chapters in these stories. There is a three part connected set of stories involving the Silver Skulls. There are stories about Huron Blackheart, a Chaos Lord pretty much. There are stories about the Imperial Guard, the Inquisition, and the constant struggle of life within the Imperium of Man, 40,000 years from now. This book fires the imagination and fills one full of Warhammer. It was an extremely enjoyable read, but pack a lunch, because this little gem is almost 900 pages. Every story was interesting and I can't wait to dig into volume 2. It's looking at me right now as if to say "what are you waiting for?" Don't all books do that to us though? Lol
It wasn't terrible but alot of these stories were printed in other Black Library anthologies. If you havent read alot of other Warhammer stuff there is alot of good stories in here but I found myself retreading alot of ground. Not that thats a terrible thing either.
The book is a total waste of you buy any other short stories collections. The 2 horus heresy stories are in other books and I'm sure that every other story in here is too