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The Siege of Terra #2

Die Verlorenen und die Verdammten

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Siege of Terra Buch 2

Der Krieg um das Sol-System ist vorbei. Die Belagerung von Terra hat begonnen. Während die Verräter ihre tödlichsten Waffen entfesseln, stehen die Verteidiger der Thronwelt Albträumen und Seuchen gegenüber – aber Terra darf nicht fallen.

WARUM DU DIESES BUCH LESEN SOLLTEST

Erfahre, wie weit Horus gehen wird, um Terra für sich zu beanspruchen – und die Schrecken, die er bereit ist, auf die Verteidiger loszulassen.

DIE GESCHICHTE

Das Bombardement von Terra hat begonnen. Nachdem die Flotte der Verräter die Verteidigungen des Sol-Systems beiseite gefegt hat, startet Horus seinen Angriff auf die Thronwelt seines Vaters. Während der Tod vom Himmel regnet, bereiten sich die Krieger auf beiden Seiten auf einen brutalen Bodenkrieg vor, in dem jeder Zentimeter mit Blut erkauft werden muss. Und im Angesicht von Angrons Zorn und Mortarions Seuchenwaffen scheinen die Verteidiger einen aussichtslosen Kampf zu führen.

Geschrieben von Guy Haley
Übersetzt von Stefan Behrenbruch

411 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 1, 2019

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About the author

Guy Haley

289 books743 followers
Guy Haley is the author of over 50 novels and novellas. His original fiction includes Crash, Champion of Mars, and the Richards and Klein, Dreaming Cities, and the Gates of the World series (as K M McKinley). However, he is best known as a prolific contributor to Games Workshop's Black Library imprint.

When not writing, he'll be out doing something dangerous in the wild, learning languages or gaming.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 187 reviews
Profile Image for Gianfranco Mancini.
2,363 reviews1,081 followers
December 3, 2019


‘This is black snow. The Palace is covered in layered void shields so deep it’ll take the enemy months to pound their way through. Everywhere else on Terra? Not so well provided. So what’s falling on us is the vaporised remains of the rest of the world. It’s full of rad and poison. Kill us all dead eventually, not that we’ll last that long.’

Second long time awaited chapter of the Siege of Terra is an epic military sci-f(antasy)i retelling of the Battle of Britain with the Warmaster’s forces obtaining supremacy on the skyes above blighted Throneworld and preparing the terrain for the following first massive land assault on the Imperial Palace from Death Guard, Night Lords, and World Eaters Traitor Legions.
Conscript Katsuhiro and a couple of Alpha Legion operatives give to the reader the point of view from human people caught in the bloody conflict between Legiones Astartes, but the Horus Heresy saga is essentially a long spanning tale about a war between superhuman Space Marines, so besides Katsuhiro’s main pov we have the ones from First Captain of the Blood Angels Raldoron, First Captain of the Sons of Horus Abaddon, temporary leader of the Night Lords Gendor Skraivok the Painted Count and, last but not least, ever-loving Angron’s equerry Khârn.



‘Confirmed. No one runs from the Conqueror,’ Lotara said. ‘What about you? Khârn?’
Khârn could no longer hear. Words belonging to something else forced themselves out of his mouth.
‘Blood for the Blood God!’ he roared, and joined battle at his father’s side.


The Astartes storylines are very entertaining ones, with Abaddon’s usual arguing with Layak and showing us what’s happening within the Vengeful Spirit and the traitor fleet, Raldoron pointing to the Pointed Count what is capable of a real champion of the Imperium, and Khârn struggling to contain his Primarch’s wrath for not being first one assaulting the Palace because of the Emperor’s power still too strong to let the Neverborn step on Terra.



Dorn himself spoke then, a message that went to every helm, vox-bead and address system in the Palace.
‘The time for speeches is done,’ said Dorn. ‘The first great test is here. My order to you all is simple, yet heed it well, and exert yourselves to see it done.
‘They are coming. Kill them all.’"


The Primarchs have some great mother-scenes too, with Jaghatai Khan leading the V Legion in a fast sortie against Death Guard legionaries to save imperial conscripts and gather intelligence about the enemy’s new talents developed after their falling to darkness, Sanguinius leaving the security of the walls at the cry of “I’m not going to die today” and inspiring troops in his role of messianic figure, Rogal Dorn becoming more and more ruthless and similar to his brother Perturabo, busy on weakening the Aegis and other Palace defences, and Angron having a trip inside the Lord of Iron’s Labyrinth and landing on Terra at last in a litteral rain of blood.



He saluted, and declamed pompously, ‘I am Gendor Skraivok, the Painted Count, Lord Commander of the Night Lords Legion, and I am your end.’
The Blood Angel was unimpressed. ‘Never heard of you,’ he said, and come in to attack, his power sword buzzing.


A real must read to all fans of siege warfare tales, Horus Heresy, Warhammer 40000, and to all people who loved Aaron Dembski-Bowden’s Night Lords trilogy and wanna find out at last if Lucoryphus of the Bleeding Eye Raptor Cult really was or not the first one getting on the top of the walls…
Profile Image for Sud666.
2,383 reviews203 followers
May 24, 2021
The events described in the Siege of Terra novels are vaguely known. What these novels do is shed detailed light on the specific events.

Horus' army has arrived. The first forces make landfall. I loved the fact that Haley tells the initial stages of this monstrous battle through the eyes of frightened conscripts. While there are quite a few moments of the high and mighty (Primarchs and such) there is a good attempt to see the war through the eyes of the normal baseline human.

The changes in the fallen Primarchs are noticeable. Many of the interesting details that are in this story are truly interesting. From Angron's rampages to the war plan of Horus. It explains much about why the Chaos forces did the assault in the manner in which they did. There was a sinister mystical aspect that often gets overlooked.

This is an epic story and the battles are intense. From the lighting strikes of the Great Khan and Sanguinius to seeing the return of the Titan Legio Solaris- this one is truly an amazing story. While, perhaps, not the best place to start for a newbie-the 40k enthusiast will find plenty to love in this excellent novel.
Profile Image for RatGrrrl.
1,016 reviews25 followers
June 4, 2024
June 2024 Read using the Horus Heresy Omnibus Project Reading Order Omnibus XXI The Siege of Terra (https://www.heresyomnibus.com/omnibus...) as part of my Oath of Moment to complete the Horus Heresy series and extras.

I am so very pleased to have read a second Haley book I absolutely adore and have literally no notes, especially after loving the first third of each of the rest of his other Horus Heresy books.

If the Solar War is seen as a prelude to the Siege of Terra, The and the Damned is the true beginning!

This is a macro narrative in the same vein and quality as Know No Fear by Dan Abnett, covering a huge amount of ground on both the Loyalist and Traitor sides, so it's difficult to give much of a summary beyond getting to see the beginning of the War on Terra through the eyes of those on every level of the theatre of war, from the conscripts and cultists of the initial wave, through the Blood Angels, White Scars, and their Primarchs battling Death Guard, to the commanders and Primarchs, discussing, arguing, and ignoring tactics to Horus and the Emperor connecting in the Warp, as well as the World Eaters struggling to contain their Daemonic forebear until it is for beings of the warp to set hoof on Terra, the plight of the Beastfolk of the Imperium, agents of Alpharius, and the incredible vain glory of the Painted Count.

This might just be my favourite wide focus story in the Horus Heresy!

I feel like this is a real cometh the hour, cometh the person situation, and Haley has truly stepped up and written his arse off with this one!

I have always enjoyed parts of his work, but felt the energy and interest seemed to bleed away from everything of his I've read, save Curze's Primarchs book, and I've always been so confused by that. The opening of Wolfsbane on Terra I absolutely adore, but I found the actual thrust of the novel on the Vengeful Spirit lacking, as I truly found the first third of Titandeath to be a perfect novella, but then didn't care about the actual important battle. But with this, I had an absolute ball from start to finish and felt this was everything I've seen in Haley's previous work, elevated to a new level and the phenomenal standard the Horus Heresy has set for itself, but hasn't always maintained.

I absolutely hate to hate, despite how liberal I can be with my ones when I feel crushed, but I truly love to be able to love something and extoll it's virtues, and I cannot say enough good about this!

The balance and weight of the narrative, perspectives, and the secondary storylines are all brilliant. Haley juggles a while lotta characters, Legions, and situations, including my absolute favourites in the crew of the Conquerer, and they all feel distinct and full of their appropriate character.

I don't really know what else to say, but this is an absolute triumph and I hope Haley is incredibly proud of just how much he understood and aced the assignment.

I don't mean to sound shady, but if you had said to me that the last three Horus Heresy books I had read had been French, McNeill, and Haley, and the scores had been, four, one, and five, I would never have guessed that Haley would be the five and that, despite being a French superfangirl and having a really good time with The Solar War, my favourite Siege of Terra boos so far, and, honestly one of my favourite Horus Heresy books with a wider focus, would be this one by Haley.

As much as it sucks to suck, it fucking rocks to rock!*

*I am cringing at this, but my brain made me think it, so now you have to read it.

Awesome novel is awesome and I am so hype again after being totally crushed by The Sons of the Selenar.

Through the Horus Heresy Omnibus Project and my own additions, I have currently read* all 54 Horus Heresy main series novels (+1 repeat), 25 novellas (+2 repeats), Cthonia's Reckoning, as well as the Macragge's Honour graphic novel, all 17 Primarchs novels 3 Primarchs antholologies , 3 Characters novels, 2 Siege of Terra Novels, 1 Siege of Terra Novella, and 183 short stories/ audio dramas across the Horus Heresy (inc. 11+ repeats). Plus, 2 Warhammer 40K further reading novels and 1 short story...this run, as well as writing 1 short story myself.

I couldn't be more appreciative of the phenomenal work of the Horus Heresy Omnibus Project, which has made this ridiculous endeavour all the better and has inspired me to create and collate a collection of Horus Heresy and Warhammer 40,000 documents and checklists (http://tiny.cc/im00yz). There are now too many items to list here, but there is a contents and explainer document here (http://tiny.cc/nj00yz).

*My tracking consistently proves shoddy, but I'm doing my best.
Profile Image for Bastiaan Vergoossen.
16 reviews5 followers
August 17, 2019
Lost and the damned review.

Finished lost and the damned. Some thoughts, spoilers.

A problem I had with the solar war, was that we were dropped into an invasion almost immediately, without a real built up that my mind needed to get (even more) hyped for this so important moment in the universe we all love, the siege of terra. For years now, for some perhaps 20 years or more, the siege of terra had some special place in our heart and was formed by a lot of different lore parts into something, a story, perhaps everyone’s own view of it. One of the big questions of this series is: can it live up to the hype? Can the 8 books become A view of the siege of terra that COMPLEMENTS our own ideas about this event? (Not replace it, but add to it). As Dan Abnett said in some interview, the authors hope that they can live up to the high expectations and give fans A good telling about the siege. Perhaps not THE SIEGE some fans have had in their minds for years, but still a good telling of this story, perhaps an addition to the older parts.

When I started the solar war, the hype was very big. For years I have waited for this moment. When then some things were missing in my opinion (and I still give solar war a 4 out of 5 stars, definitely a good book and worthy opening of the siege series), that immediately has a big impact. For example: I needed a gathering of ALL the traitors at the start of this book. Making plans, deciding how to attack and so on. Just to get the idea: yeah, everyone (almost everyone) is present now, here we go. That scene wasn’t there. The attack almost immediately began.
When the siege starts, and you have your first book for a couple of months, until the second arrives, you immediately want to see everyone. All the traitor primarchs for example, and surely Horus himself. While reading the book it turned out that we would only get Perturabo and Horus mostly in the special warp scene. Angron and Fulgrim we only saw very shortly, near the end. That immediately made it for me a bit LESS grand, a bit smaller. And still, French gave us some very cool scenes in the void war, with some real cool grand scale of ships and orbitals and so on.

This second book fixed a lot of those problems for me. We saw a gathering of the traitor primarchs, making plans, arguing and so on. Horus himself was present, and not only in some special warp scenes. This immediately gave me the feeling: NOW we are truly underway, now the siege can start properly. These things are important, also because for perhaps 20 years I had some ideas in my head about the siege and then you NEED to see some things that are important for you.

Some cool stuff and things I liked in Lost and the damned:


- Cool scene with that first shell at the sanctum, as a challenge to the triumvirate.

- The scene with the conscripts arriving really gave a sense of pressure, chaos, overcrowded, scale and so on. Good scene.

- I liked the Abaddon vs Layak scenes. I liked them in solar war and now I liked them again, although they felt a bit repetitive. I like how Abaddon is so suspicious about the things happening with Horus and the warp, which fits in nicely with the 40k Abaddon. Also cool to see how Abaddon takes over when Horus is not around, even provoking and silencing other primarchs.
- The team of authors has given the invasion and siege a good deal of thought. It’s not just : well, we bombard, then drops some ships, attack the walls, take the palace, kill the Emperor and it’s done. The concepts with the Aegis, it’s strengths but also weaknesses, the Emperor holding back the neverborn and therefore also the daemon primarchs and so on: well thought upon, felt realistic in an unrealistic world.
- I liked the Kharn – Angron scenes and the question : what to do with angry ron, we can’t keep him around but he also can’t land of Terra yet …. Angron’s landing on Terra then was also nicely done. And although we don’t get a lot of the other traitor primarchs in this book (most feature only 1 or 2 scenes): seeing them all (almost all) together was enough for me to satisfy this need of grand scale, grand gatherings and the feeling that NOW we have a proper siege going. Now I can patiently to wait for the other books when surely Fulgrim, Mortarion and Magnus will play bigger roles.
- The Khan doing what the Khan does best, attacking using speed, was an entertaining scene, surely when the Khan faced some problems on the way back and a certain rescue came. The rescue scene could have had a bit more to it though, but okay, nice scene. Also, the Khan is developing into a very likable character. He was always a bit aloof, bit strange, on the sidelines, but now he is starting to become the primarch who thinks about the ordinary humans and population of Terra. Only strange thing is, is that this would have fitted better with Sanguinius his character, his compassion. Not that he isn’t compassionate, but perhaps it should have been HE who would value the normal humans that much. Bit strange, but okay.
- The scene with Sanguinius landing beyond the wall, being adored and giving the ordinary humans hope was a nice one. Scene matches with the cover, which is a good thing I think.
- On the scale : one of the difficult but important things for the siege is, is giving it the right scale, the enormity of it. This book did well on that part. Perhaps not perfect, but still there were some scenes in which the scale and the greatness of it all comes to shine properly.

Well, seeing how Haley built up this second book, with the first shells, the air battle, the aegis, the first attacks on the 3 lines and thereafter on the walls itself, the conscripts as canon fodder and the astartes only fighting near the end: A very good built up, which made it a book out of it’s own right, but also shows they (authors) have the right amount of built up and pace to REALLY let the siege of terra series work. Book wasn’t perfect, perhaps even here and there some inconsistencies with the older books and the whole HH series, but a worthy addition to the siege series and a good book considering it’s really a built up to part 3. When we have finally 8 books, I think we will have a siege of terra story that is a worthy story considering the legend it is and the meaning it has had for us fans all these years.

4,5 out of 5 stars.
Profile Image for Andrej Manchevski.
43 reviews2 followers
May 8, 2026
I don't know. It was neat.
It's mostly setup before the real shit starts. There is a slow unnerving build up of dread before the true face of this war is revealed. This series is supposed to be science fantasy but the science part is shoved into the locker for this book. It is put away so that we can appreciate the floating island of bones, meteorological oddities like raining blood and siege towers with giant faces that spit artillery.
It really leans into the epic fantasy tropes. An army of righteous good guys defending against screaming freaks and demons. In the end the space marines show up guns blazing, chainswords buzzing and heretic slaying and we know that the true siege of Terra has begun.
Profile Image for Sara.
2 reviews
March 28, 2022
I loved this book! It was a much stronger and more compelling tale than the first instalment of the Siege of Terra. Why then, you could ask, am I not giving it five stars? Because I am a nerd.

The book has several instances of bad science - and I am not talking about the fantasy parts here. I have no problem with void shields, las pistols, or daemonic infestations, but nonsense in the more mundane parts annoys me. Such things rip me right out of the zone and should have been edited out. Let me give a few examples:

“Five beams of collimated light slammed into the tower, their impacts tightly grouped, each coming in from a different angle.”
How can beams be both parallel and come from different angles? It doesn’t make sense.

“Where the play of black energy caressed them, the lenses dimmed from healthy blues and greens to angry reds, then through lower frequencies to sulphurous, glowering oranges.”
It is unusual to describe visual light by frequency rather than wavelength, but that is not my issue. The problem is that red is much lower in the spectrum than orange. Anyone who has seen a rainbow should know!

“The sun was gone, hidden by clouds of ash black as the sackcloth of myth.”
Ok, this is not so much bad science as just a bad metaphor but I still feel it is related. Sackcloth is brown unless dyed. It may be that in the far future sackcloth is thought to have been black, but we don’t know that and the statement just comes off as confusing.

So yeah, awesome book. I heartily recommend it - especially if you are less pedantic than me. :)
Profile Image for Matthew Hipsher.
100 reviews1 follower
December 10, 2019
Part 2 of the Solar War picks up where part 1, the Siege of Terra left off, and it doesn't skip a beat.

This book also does the multi perspective well, jumping from the siege walls, to galactic cruisers, from inside the throne room to Sanguinias fighting demons seamlessly.

We see almost all of the major players in this book, and there are a few plot threads sewn up nice and tight.
But I think the highlight of the book is all of the scenes through the perspective of the nirmal human soldier, Katsuhiro. It's an amazing view into normal human life on Terra during the siege.

Absolute must read.
Profile Image for Monsour.
477 reviews37 followers
March 7, 2020
Angel Boy is the Best Boy change my mind.
Profile Image for Liam.
267 reviews8 followers
October 24, 2019
Game Workshop have been building up to the Siege of Terra for so long now, through the Horus Heresy series. It's finally arriving, and so far it's a huge disappointment,

The biggest problem I had with this book was the language. It goes totally overboard on metaphors and similes, which means that it reads like poetry written by a not very good poet. Descriptive passages go on and on, mixing metaphors and finding new ways of talking about how dirty and how noisy war is, until I was losing the will to read. So, so many pages talking about how noisy the siege is.

The Primarchs, some of the most interesting characters in the GW pantheon, have mostly been reduced to caricatures. Horus does precisely nothing for the entire book. Angron storms around in a sulk. Fulgrim just giggles and claps in his brief appearance. Sanguinius is apparently completely bullet-proof now. With their roles greatly reduced, there's very little talking in the book other than barked orders above the noise of the siege. There's one scene with the Mechanicum which hints at the possibility of some interesting politics but then ignores them for the rest of the book, and there's a scene where the 12 High Lords come together, for a little bit of exposition but no interesting interplay.

There are also a couple of Alpha Legion operatives who are sadly wasted. Having sneaked inside the defences they then do hardly anything at all. A huge waste for one of the most interesting legions.

This rather long book could have just as easily been an interesting two or three page narrative in White Dwarf magazine, rather than a filler novel to start the siege off.
259 reviews1 follower
May 11, 2023
I found the trench war outside the palace more gripping and enjoyable to read then the void battles in the solar war, the human perspectives here seem to work better too especially the conscripts going from green to veterans over the course of the siege, the description of the opening tests against the palaces defences was cool with gradually greater forces pressed against the trenches as the defenders keep thinning out in numbers and ratios and disease starts killing large numbers off, it all gave a good sense of how the battle progressed and what people faced on the ground, it also works well as a way for the novel to continuously build the action in a natural way, also both traitor and loyalist primarchs are enjoyable to read here angron calling flugrims space marines his peacocks was funny, it would have been interesting to see the war on the rest of the planet play out in more detail but it's understandable that they centralised the action so I can't really complain about it.
Profile Image for Kirbie  Ackman.
15 reviews
January 22, 2025
While I did throughly enjoy this book, I think it could have been split into two and tacked onto the first and third. I just didn’t think anything stood out so much that it needed to be its own book. The end I was left wanting more… it kind of fizzled out a bit.

I loved the POV’s of the humans among the Legionaries.

I’m hoping that there is a bit more of the beast people in the next few books. They just kind of came out of no where, in all the 54 books of the heresy we didn’t even get a short story of these beast people. Boom these characters we haven’t heard of are at the siege! And even with their introduction in this story it was barely anything to go on. That was a little frustrating.

You’ll never hear me complain about The Khan, White Scars, Raldoran and Kharne! Their POV’s were amazing, as always!
39 reviews
October 30, 2019
Frustrating

Haley is wonderful writer. He has written some of my favourite books, and there are flashes of greatness here, but there are clouds too. The primarchs are caricatures and one dimensional. Antron is huffy, petrurabo has lost all of his cool, the others might as well not be in it. The battles are booming but the scale is so big as to be baffling at times. Layak's floating island did it for me. Pity. Solar war was ok. This one was ok. Hope this series develops. So far, a stumbling start.
Profile Image for Horus Lupercal Online.
50 reviews
April 29, 2023
What a great read this was! I loved how we followed the story through both human eyes, and transhuman eyes. That was a very clever way to keep the story fresh, interesting, and introduce us to some new characters (as well as including a few that make a comeback here).

There are so many highlights in this novel that it’s hard to pick favorites. But there was one scene in particular that featured The Khan, that for me truly stood out (trust me, when you read it, you will know which scene I’m talking about). In all honestly there was also something in the beginning of the book that took me a bit out of the story as I encountered what I thought to be the first error in continuity. I had to go back to Old Earth to see if I had maybe misread something: I didn’t. Going on the internet I saw that this “error” will be put to rest later on in the saga, so that put my mind at ease.

Simply put, this novel was absolutely worth 5 stars. It was a thrilling novel, with many amazing battle scenes, terrific characters, and stand out moments. I can’t wait to see what the next book will bring to the table: For the Emperor!
Profile Image for Prime.
5 reviews1 follower
September 8, 2022
I really want to root for Guy Haley. He is a good author and seems like a cool guy but like many of the books in the Siege of terra series you can tell he's fighting against obnoxious corporate mandated word count. It leads to sections of the book feeling really drawn out and boring and if I'm being honest I only really enjoyed the last 100 pages when it chose to focus on Space Marines

With that being said the trench warfare stuff was quite awesome. Some of the best I've read in some time. Truly gripping stuff and perhaps the only good 'human' story we've gotten in the SOT. Its just a shame a lot of the other aspects felt drawn out.
Profile Image for Milo.
890 reviews106 followers
January 9, 2025
Banger. Haley is one of the best writers in the Black Library stable and this shows his balance of everyone from the doomed conscripts in the first line of defence and the Primarchs like Horus, Angron and Sanguinius. It's an ensemble novel that drifts around from chapter to chapter expertly - building on the first wave before the Space Marines land. The suspense and dread of the calm before the storm is felt here - and Haley writes bolter-porn well. It's hard for some writers to capture the sheer scale but he does.
Profile Image for Chavdar Chankov.
121 reviews5 followers
January 25, 2020
The Lost and the Damned had great moments as I expect from every Siege of Terra book. I was interested to see how those stories would play out. As always the traitor parts are the best, because they give us a glimpse into their world.

But I think the story got clogged at a point that made it harder to read. Also there were some sub character stories that led nowhere. Such as the Dark Mechanicum one, the flyer one, Kharn and If i might say, even Sanguinius. But still there were plenty of cool moments to make up for it.
Profile Image for Ruth Letterman.
33 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2026
This is a marvellously written Warhammer book. Great character interactions, both on human and primarch level. You get awesome insights into the strategies of both sides. No one is left out, the plot is ingeniously composed and well thought out, and finally I feel that even the demigod level characters are given souls, with good interactions, drama, and well thought out dilemmas. Excellent work, I had a blast reading this.
Profile Image for Christian Freed.
Author 60 books745 followers
May 2, 2021
Standard Black Library. I was surprised that a few characters survived the end. The battles were massive, the strategy deep- and slightly alarming with the waste of lives- but the ending is building as traitor legions start operating on Terra.
Profile Image for Matty.
12 reviews
July 5, 2025
the painted count is such an evil twink night lord. he's gonna be way more fucked up when he comes back after being tortured in the warp by demons for 666 years or whatever it was. otherwise this book was cool. demon primearch Angron was pretty sick. voice actor for the audio book ATE
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Emerson Sullivan.
23 reviews
March 27, 2020
It started out a little slow but once past that the narrative and background kept me entertained. Im excited for the next six books.
Profile Image for Richard Samuel.
45 reviews
September 24, 2022
Another great book, action all the way and a progression to the final confrontation that ends the heresy.
Profile Image for Colton.
13 reviews
March 11, 2024
My space Jesus messiah gets his spotlight
Profile Image for Paul.
20 reviews
July 30, 2024
Ab Seite 355 saß ich aufrecht
91 reviews2 followers
November 12, 2024
The last flickering of the light in the face of overwhelming grim darkness. Pure Horus Heresy.
Profile Image for Matthew.
83 reviews3 followers
January 17, 2021
Legit amazing. Best Horus Heresy book in a long while.
Profile Image for Lee Frost.
110 reviews
January 24, 2021
This was a slow starter for me, and other books got in the way of me ploughing through.
That being said the finale to this has set the scene for years to come. I cannot wait to see how the writers handle the remainder of the Siege.
Profile Image for Father Aaron Lynch.
70 reviews1 follower
May 6, 2026
Really feels like we're almost coming to the beginning of the end, maybe. Honestly though, I had a lot of fun with this one. My only complaint is that it made Perturabo look like a gigantic moron. He is that, but I keep thinking he's gonna be cooler than he actually is. Sanguinius continues to be the best character in the whole series.
Profile Image for Chris The Lizard from Planet X.
472 reviews10 followers
July 14, 2025
Book Review: The Lost and the Damned by Guy Haley – Siege of Terra Book 2
Reviewer: A Newcomer to the Grim Darkness of the Far Future


Introduction:

As someone still relatively new to the sprawling and brutal universe of Warhammer 40,000, diving into The Lost and the Damned by Guy Haley—Book 2 of The Horus Heresy: Siege of Terra series—was both a thrilling and overwhelming experience. I came in with only a broad-strokes understanding of the 31st Millennium setting: a galaxy at war, the Emperor on Terra, his traitorous son Horus rebelling, and countless genetically engineered warriors tearing reality apart. What I encountered in this novel was something far more intricate and immersive: a massive tapestry of heroism, horror, and humanity teetering on the brink of annihilation.



Plot Overview:

The Lost and the Damned picks up with the traitor forces tightening their noose around Terra itself. The Solar War has ended. The traitor fleet has arrived. The Siege has truly begun.

Unlike the first book (The Solar War), which focused more on space battles and the long approach to Terra, this entry shifts the action planetside. The scope is more intimate yet no less epic, portraying the siege from the perspectives of many different characters: from common soldiers and civilians to powerful demigods like the Primarch Rogal Dorn and his corrupted brother Perturabo. Guy Haley excels at capturing the emotional gravity of each of these perspectives, showing us the creeping doom of a civilization’s final stand.



Perspective and Character Depth:

What truly impressed me as a newcomer was how human this book felt, despite its mythic scale. You can feel the weariness of the defenders, the despair of the people inside the walls of Terra, and the ruthless ambition of the traitor legions clawing at the gates. The novel doesn’t just glorify war; it shows its rot, its cruelty, and the way it erodes even the most disciplined of minds.

One standout for me was how the book gave weight to non-Astartes perspectives. Through the eyes of Imperial citizens, common soldiers of the Imperial Army, and the mysterious Sisters of Silence, we see that this isn’t just a battle between gods and monsters—this is the slow collapse of a world. You begin to understand that the Warhammer universe is not just bleak for the sake of it; it’s a place where every small flicker of hope matters precisely because it’s so fragile.

Haley also writes Primarchs and Astartes with an almost Shakespearean grandeur, yet he never loses sight of their emotional cores. Rogal Dorn, tasked with defending Terra, becomes a figure of desperate stoicism—rigid and brilliant, yet clearly unraveling under the weight of responsibility. Perturabo, on the other side, is a fascinating study in bitterness and unrecognized genius.



Tone and Atmosphere:

If you’re not used to the grimdark tone of Warhammer 40K, this book might come across as relentlessly bleak. But as I quickly learned, that’s a feature, not a bug. The sheer despair of Terra’s fall is what makes the moments of resistance shine. Every act of courage, every loyal stand, feels like a miracle. The writing is richly atmospheric—decaying gothic architecture, endless legions of soldiers, brutalist machinery grinding through human flesh. Haley captures the nightmare perfectly.

What surprised me was the subtlety in how he conveys madness—not just literal insanity, but philosophical madness. The traitors believe in their cause. The defenders cling to faith in a silent Emperor. Chaos isn’t just monsters and daemons; it’s ideology gone rot. That element was haunting, and it elevated the story above just military sci-fi.



Accessibility for New Readers:

Now, if you’re brand new to Warhammer 40K, this book is not the ideal starting point. It assumes a lot of prior knowledge. The politics, the factions, even the terminology (what’s a Custodes? a Tech-Priest? the Mechanicum?) can be dizzying. There’s a glossary in some editions, and I had to consult the Warhammer wiki more than once.

That said, The Lost and the Damned still works if you approach it the way you’d approach Shakespeare or epic fantasy: let the world wash over you, absorb what you can, and allow the emotional resonance to carry you. The stakes are always clear: the walls are crumbling, the defenders are outnumbered, and something terrible is breaking through the cracks of reality.



Themes and Emotional Impact:

There is something profoundly moving about seeing Terra—essentially the cradle of human civilization—reduced to a battlefield. Haley doesn’t just give us spectacle. He gives us tragedy. Every defense feels temporary. Every sacrifice feels necessary. There’s no guarantee of survival. The fact that you feel for these characters, even knowing the broad strokes of the universe’s future, speaks to Haley’s skill.

One especially powerful theme is that of faith. Not just in religion or the Emperor, but in people—comrades, leaders, and the idea of enduring long enough to see morning. That fragile, desperate kind of faith is what keeps the defenders going. It’s what gives this book emotional resonance amid the thunder and blood.



Final Thoughts:

As someone still orienting myself in the Warhammer 40,000 universe, The Lost and the Damned was a brutal, dense, but ultimately unforgettable experience. Guy Haley weaves tragedy, spectacle, and character drama into something that feels both ancient and futuristic, spiritual and nihilistic. It’s a story of last stands, crumbling belief, and the terrible price of rebellion.

I don’t recommend starting here if you’re new—but if you’re curious and willing to be overwhelmed, this is a hauntingly powerful entry that reveals just how deep the Heresy goes.



Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5)
Massive in scale, unrelenting in tone, and surprisingly emotional—this is grimdark at its finest.
Profile Image for Kavinay.
621 reviews
December 16, 2019
Better than the HH average fare. The principal characters and threads being brought to a head helps make up for the usual bolter porn.

I do worry though that some the central conflicts are given short shrift with no hint of further clarity:
[Primarchs] "Why didn't daddy tell us about Chaos."
[Malcador] "Chaos is awful, daddy knows best."
[Primarchs] "That's true."
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