The latest issue of the FREE Morpheus Tales Supplement is out now! It’s got an exclusive interview with Dan Abnett (Horus Heresy and 40K Legend!) and Nik Vincent, loads of articles and columns from the usual crew (marvellous!), and a load of book and film reviews including some from me (which are fabulous, obviously!).
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HUNT FOR VOLDORIUS By Andy Hoare – Reviewed
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 40k, action, action-led, Alpha Legion, andy hoare, andy remic, battle, black library, book, books, brutal, bucketloads, cardboard characters, chaos, chaos space marines, character development, characters, dan abnett, david gunn, death, decent plot, download, entertaining, epic, exciting, fantasy, fiction, Fighting, games workshop, good, heavily, horror, horror novel, horus heresy, hunt for voldorius, Kor’sarro Khan, magazine, majority, morpheus tales, novel, novels, pages, plenty of action, plot, premise, read, reading, rebels, recommendation, review, reviewed, reviewer, reviews, series, SF, space marine, space marines, story, supplement, thriller, write, writer, writers, writing on January 24, 2014 by stanleyriiksThis is one of the Space Marine’s battle novels, so you pretty much know what you can expect. Plenty of action, and you get that, in bucketloads. What the book fails to deliver is character-development and a decent plot.
Voldorius is a chaos space marine, leader of the infamous traitors the Alpha Legion, and sworn nemesis of Kor’sarro Khan of the White Scars Space marines. Basically, Kor’sarro hunts Voldorius and his legion to the enslaved planet of Quintus and attacks with the help of the mysterious Raven Guard Space Marines.
Ok, so not much story, cardboard characters, but plenty of action, loads of fighting and some nice touches, including the rebels, the hints of Voldorius’ power and the tension between the two space marine outfits.
The problem with the book lies within the limited premise of the series. What we want when picking up a battle novel is a lot of action. But action cannot be maintained throughout an entire novel, the reader would just become numb. The majority of 40K universe books are heavily action-led, but (the Horus Heresy novels at least) have a well-crafted plot behind the action and noticeable character development.
This book isn’t a failure, it’s entertaining enough for me not to write off the entire series, but Hoare needs to look at Dan Abnett, David Gunn and Andy Remic to see how truly brilliant action-heavy novels can contain good characterisation and plotting.
Good, but not quite good enough for a recommendation. Does what it says on the tin, but I was expecting a bit more.