Brunner, a notorious bounty hunter and gun-for-hire, makes his perilous way through the dark and dangerous Warhammer world, in an all new fantasy adventure. ORiginal.
This is an awesome Warhammer Fantasy novel set in Estalia and Tilea, a kind of Renaissance Spain and Italy. The first half consists of a group of related short stories and the second half is a novella about a revenge conspiracy involving Nurgle, Slaanesh, Khorne, and Tzeentch. The main character, Brunner, the Reiklander Bounty Hunter, is really interesting, a true bad ass. He's a fantasy-version of the intractable Judge Dredd (except Brunner is motivated by coin rather than justice--truly appropriate for the setting). These tales are grim, bloody, action-filled, and engaging: true escapist spectacles with the sword and sorcery intensity set to 11. C.L. Werner is one my favorite Warhammer Fantasy novelists. In my opinion, he gets the themes of the "Old World" and hews closely to them while keeping things fresh. A lot of the Old World (most of it, honestly) analogizes European nations and historical periods, and one gets the sense the author knows the relevant literary history. For example, in this novel, you get the sense that this is modeled on an Italian Renaissance revenge tragedy, except the protagonist isn't seeking revenge but has nevertheless gotten caught up in the bloody machinations. To summarize: looking forward to reading more of Brunner's adventures. There are several more after this.
At long, long, long last I finally delved into the Warhammer universe. Deciding where to jump into this franchise is its own homework assignment and I settled on this collection of tales.
Selecting the tales of Brunner the Bounty Hunter was a great place to begin the Warhammer journey as following his exploits doesn't require any deep knowledge of existing lore as we spend this book following him over the course of several short stories and one medium-length tale.
Strangely, I typically don't enjoy short stories as they usually end just as they begin, but I found the format to work very well this time. Werner is a great writer who provides just enough detail and immersion in the Warhammer world to pull me along and keep me entertained.
This book is comprised of seven tales, with the last one being the longest at almost triple the length of the others. Their overall qualities vary from good to great, but I did ultimately knock a star off because all seven stories basically have the same set up. Brunner is a bounty hunter/killer, so you can probably imagine how most of his tales go: something bad happens to someone, they find Brunner and hire him to Do the Thing and Brunner, being the badass he is, Does the Thing without fail.
So, while the stories are repetitious, they are still entertaining, and I found it a great entry point for this franchise. I am hooked and have already bought more books.
One of the better Warhammer books I have read. I'm really giving this a 3.5, but giving it the full 4 felt a bit too generous. The characters are great, and I quite liked the bard framing device used to connect the short stories. It reminded me a lot of the first Witcher novel, collecting short stories to tell the exploits of a hunter and develop the character. Much like other WH novels, the stories go through and depict the protagonist fighting each of the groups of baddies (orcs, skaven, chaos, etc). This is kind of old hat by this point, but each story has enough of its own flavor to keep them interesting and not feel like they are recycling the same plot over and over. I will definitely be reading the second set of stories when I get a chance. Recommended for fans of Warhammer Fantasy or fans of the Witcher.
Outside of William King’s Gotrek and Felix novels, I firmly believe the Brunner series is the best place to start reading Warhammer Fantasy. It’s about a “one-dimensional” complete badass bounty hunter. It has a lot of American Wild West vibes.
As good as the first Brunner novel is, I also think the 2nd novel gets significantly stronger; I have Blood & Steel a solid 5 stars.
Both books offer a diverse micro-experience of different foes. In Blood Money, Brunner encounters: - Orcs - Beastmen - Skaven - A Mutant - Dark Elves
I look forward to reading the final book in the series.
**1/2: this is not a novel but a string of repetitive short stories when the thinnest gossamer of through-line to stitch them together. Taken individually, they are enjoyable. But to read through the whole book in one-go would be a total grind.
3,5/5 Me encanta volver a ser niño de vez en cuando y sin duda Warhammer Fantasy lo consigue. ¿ Porque pasa esto o aquello ? Pues porque si o acaso no mola!
Easy, nice, gritty read, book of stories about Brunner, hopefully in later instalments se will get to know him better, but from what I have seen of him, I liked that a lot
C.L. Werner is fast becoming my favorite Warhammer Fantasy authors. Blood Money is the first book of the Brunner the Bounty Hunter Omnibus. It tells the story, oddly enough, of Brunner the Bounty Hunter.
Talk about the quintessential anti-hero. This guy is a total D-bag, but I couldn't help but love him. This book is a series of short stories that tell of Brunner's adventures in Bretonnia and the Border Princes, penned by a writer from the Empire.
I like the use of the short stories with Brunner as they give us many views of how he plies his trade and all the different ways he can be a bastard.
I think that what I like the most about Brunner is that he doesn't appear super-natural like many of the fantasy heroes such as Gotrek, and he doesn't rely on magic. What he does is use his mind as a weapon along with his very prodigious fighting skills.
I am very much looking forward to continuing to the next story Blood and Steal.
I give this book four collected bounties out of five.
This is Warhammer fantasy at it's finest: dark, gritty, with an interesting protagonist. However, I couldn't go over three stars because a) as with basically all of the Warhammer books, it's a pretty light read without much depth and b) there were a number of small typoes and odd word choices that bugged me.