“Is Kylo Ren actually based on Kage? No, but maybe!”
I’m going to be honest from the start, as per – this series is a rather a unique story in my opinion. The Last Chancers is basically a cookbook upon how to make mass murder and get away with it – of course, while a galactic war is afoot. The stories in this omnibus are all a bit f**ked up and deranged to read, it’s kind of left me detesting but also loving Kage - think Trooper Cuu from Gaunts Ghost's but with authority.
Anyhoo, The Last Chancers is a series of three novels set against the harsh gothic wars of Wahammer 40,000. We’re introduced to the 13th Penal Legion or otherwise known as The Last Chancers. Led by Colonel Schaffer (what an utter bastard this guy is) the members of the penal legion are made up of convicts and scum of the universe… non-tea drinkers *shock/horror). Lieutenant Kage is the main protagonist, an Imperial Guard reject, murderer. The relationship between himself and the colonel is a particular highlight when reading these stories… they utterly hate one another and I rather enjoyed the choice dark humour between the two of them.
So, the series is set over three novels; Legion introduces Kage, the Colonel and the rest of the outfit to us. Jumping between warzones, were given a taste of the type of suicidal missions the Chancers are sent on. It boils down to a story of survival, one that Kage is determined to live through – even if it means sacrificing team mates. Tyranids and humans… it’s game over man. Book two Kill Team focuses much more on Kage than the penal legion. There really isn’t much of the Chancers left. His job is to train a squad, preparing for a mission to take on Chaos. This novel delves more deeply into the relationship between Kage and Schaffer. The way Kage is slowing slipping into madness is a fun trip down the spiral. Annihilation basically is the second novel, just with a living target this time, not a piece of machinery. For me this was by far the weakest novel for me.
I’ve issue with this novel firstly, if you’re going to write a character like Kage you need to not have him strangle old ladies and kick babies’ heads in… just because he was ordered to. I get that if he refused, he would be shot and this was just another one of the Colonel plays to kill Kage, but sheez, no wonder Kage is going nuts. I’m fairly thick skinned but the strangling of the old woman was poorly written and clumsy at best – possibly a tad to graphic for Warhammer 40K. I feel it came off worse as Kage blamed everything upon the Colonel and having to obey orders. Maybe I’m use to characters within Warhammer to own what they do. Man up, take responsibility for your actions! As the reader, I really wanted to be rooting for Kage as he is in the shittest of shit situations – unfortunately towards the end of the second novel I really couldn’t care less about Kage. I was more interested in the Colonel’s backstory, which I hasten to add came out into on of these weird confessional rants that dot these stories. It was completely out of character with Schaffer’s persona – for example during a major trek through worst-than-Antarctica weather, he decides to unload his thoughts. The same happens in the third novel twice. It’s all over the place.
So, the stories, for me, are poorly written with very weak character development, (yes, this is partially to do with the quick turnover of personal) which is surprising as there’s only two or three characters who are continual throughout the three novels. I’m a big fan of Gav Thorpe’s work with lore from his early Games Workshop stint, but as a writer he seems to struggle with writing interesting characters and even the basics at times. Deliverance a Horus Heresy novel, is a fine example of this, great idea, just really poorly written and for some, lore breaking. The Last Chancers series struggles to really make me feel anything for the characters, other than contempt.