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Descent of Angels: Pt. 6: Loyalty and Honour: Pt. 6 (Horus Heresy)

Descent of Angels: Pt. 6: Loyalty and Honour: Pt. 6 (Horus Heresy)

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Author: Mitchel Scanlon
Publisher: Black Library
Category: Book

List Price: £6.99
Buy New: £2.32
You Save: £4.67 (67%)



New (41) Used (8) Collectible (1) from £0.91

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 40 reviews
Sales Rank: 3456

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 416
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 3.9 x 1.2

ISBN: 1844165086
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.92
EAN: 9781844165087
ASIN: 1844165086

Publication Date: September 29, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Fulgrim: Visions of Treachery (Horus Heresy)
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  • The Flight of the Eisenstein: The Heresy Unfolds (Horus Heresy)
  • Galaxy in Flames: The Heresy Revealed (Horus Heresy)
  • Horus Heresy: Battle for the Abyss (Warhammer 40,000: The Horus Heresy)

Customer Reviews:   Read 35 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars good stuff   December 3, 2008
A. Horswill
I enjoyed the book immensley and all who have read the Horus Heresy series up until know shouldn't be put off by the negative reviews, enjoy it for what it is.


4 out of 5 stars Good read   December 2, 2008
D. Gillbanks (Liverpool, UK)
The 6th novel in the horus heresy series detracts away from the style of the previous 5 novels, and takes us back to the beginning of the dark angels legion. As a result, around half of the novel reads like a warhammer fantasy story, with the 40k setting kicking in later. for this reason I think, many people didn't like it. Like the later book Battle for the Abyss, I was put off by the reviews and actually moved straight to legion, even though I brought Eisenstein and Fulgrim along with this, but I am glad I went back to this and made up my own mind.

Overall it was a very good book, and one if its main strong points was that, unlike the other novels, the story almost exclusively focuses on the one character, or at least from his point of view, rather than jumping from character to character like the others did. I agree that the ending was quite abrupt, and I sensed that the author ran out of space, and had to 'sum up' at the end to keep within the desired page count, but if you know the fate of the dark angels from the codexes or elsewhere, there are few questions left to be answered.

I'm not sure if it will be made into a trilogy as some rumours say, but even if it isn't, enought has been said here for the rest, as the saying goes, to be history.

Overall, an entertaining story, but if you expect an exclusive sci-fi novel, you might be dissapointed by the earlier parts. On the other hand, if you enjoy a good story, and don't worry so much where the setting is, you won't likely be dissapointed.



2 out of 5 stars Not that great   September 5, 2008
George Orwell2 (UK)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'm enjoying the Horus Heresy series but this is the weakest so far and does lend itself to the suspicion that books are being published to cash in on the fact that the Heresy is so vast in scope the series could easily stretch to 100 novels or more.

Most of this novel is set on Caliban before the Emperor arrives and thus lays the psychological groundwork for what we know the future will bring. The idea of the planet's warrior code and the descriptions of the world are well written but the big failing is the dialogue which is pretty terrible. On page 65 we have the line "I'm not fat protested Eliath I'm just big boned" which as a fan of South Park made me laugh out loud and didn't exactly encourage my expectations for the rest of the novel.

In short, only buy if you are a "completist" (as I am) because it's not a very good novel on the whole and doesn't really belong in the same company as the rest of the Horus series.



2 out of 5 stars horus heresy or not???   September 5, 2008
Jared Rose (uk)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

following on from the great book which was Fulgrim (5star book) i was looking forward to this one, (spoiler alert). Fans of warhammer 40,000 crave to know more about the background of the dark angels and all there secrets etc, and you wont be disappointed with the inclusion of primarch lion el'johnson , planet caliban (the rock) etc but we are talking about a book set in the horus heresy, and sadly this is why i rate this book 2 stars, its not aweful because you get snippets of backstory and how secretive the dark angels really are, BUT and its a big BUT!!! there isnt a single thing in this book to do with the heresy and just when the book starts picking up pace it ends (90% of book with no marines) 10% of rushed writing. This book should of been a standalone book. Buy for completions sake but be warned its not what the cover title says itis.


2 out of 5 stars I tend to agree with much of the sentiment of the other reviews   July 6, 2008
D. M. Lee
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Quite honestly I don't know what the point of this book is. It's set before all of the other novels in the heresy series and has no relevance to the other books at all. It has only the vaguest reference to the Dark Angels chapter that it claims to reveal all the hidden truths about. Primarch Lion El' Jonson is treated more as a subsidary character who remains on the periphery of the story all the way until the end. It seems to be the story of some guy who nobody's ever heard of or cares about becoming an astartes. The books not the worst 40K novel I've read but it just isn't anywhere near as interesting as the others in the series. The other Heresy books enlighten you about the main players in the Horus Heresy that have always interested me since I first got into 40K all those years ago; Horus, Dorn, Sanguinius, Fulgrim. Not to mention giving a real sense of imperial history. This one just seems a needless spin off. I'll say no more.

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