The Horus Heresy
The Horus Heresy is an ongoing series of science fantasy set in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 setting of tabletop miniatures wargame company Games Workshop. Penned by several authors, the series takes place during the Horus Heresy, a fictional galaxy-spanning civil war occurring 10,000 years before the far future of Warhammer 40,000. The war is described as a major contributing factor to the game's dystopian environment.
Author | Various |
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Illustrator | Various (List of artists) |
Cover artist |
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Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fantasy |
Publisher | Black Library |
Published | 2006 | –present
No. of books | 56 (as of November 2019) |
Website | https://www.blacklibrary.com/the-horus-heresy |
The books are published in several media by the Black Library, a Games Workshop division, with the first title released in April 2006; as of November 2019 the series consists of 56 published volumes, with more in the pipeline.
The series has developed into a distinct and successful product line for the Black Library; titles have often appeared in bestseller lists, and overall the work has received critical approval despite reservations. It is an established, definitive component of Games Workshop's Horus Heresy sub-brand, and authoritative source material for the entire Warhammer 40,000 shared universe and its continuing development.
Overview
The Horus Heresy is a dark, far future military space opera[1] concerning an intergalactic civil war within the nascent Imperium of Man, and which constitutes a cornerstone event of the dystopian science fantasy Warhammer 40,000 universe. The Horus Heresy is presented as a major chapter of conflict in the Warhammer 40,000 lore: it is caused by a Chaos plot to foil the Imperium's leader and founder, the mysterious Emperor of Man, by fomenting rebellion and internecine warfare in the expanding Imperium of Man. The story focuses on the Emperor's 20 genetically engineered lieutenants, the Primarchs, and the legions of genetically-enhanced superhuman soldiers that they lead, the Legiones Astartes, which find themselves divided into loyalist and traitor factions as they struggle for religious hegemony.[2]
The shared universe was originally created in 1987 by Games Workshop, parent company of series publisher Black Library, as the campaign setting for the Warhammer 40,000 tabletop miniatures wargame[3] and in 2006 Black Library began publishing The Horus Heresy series. The series consists of full-length novels, and novel-length compilations of novellas or short stories, written by a number of authors. The series includes new characters as well as establishing the background of previously-established Warhammer 40,000 characters who play an important role in the post-Heresy fictional universe.
The first three novels in The Horus Heresy are an opening book trilogy. This trilogy presents some of the background and causes of the Heresy, and describes the start of the conflict. The arc's focus is on Warmaster Horus, the principal antagonist, and covers about two years in the overall Heresy timeline; most of this period elapses before the rebellion begins. Following the trilogy, the narrative is not strictly sequential and is often presented in nonlinear fashion from book to book.[4] Apart from the initial trilogy, the stories often concern events that happen earlier or later than their position in the series would suggest, or may include time periods already covered in other series titles.
The majority of stories in The Horus Heresy are set around the start of the fictional universe's 31st millennium, in contrast to most Warhammer 40,000 material, which takes place in the 41st millennium.[5] The stories in The Horus Heresy routinely cover the conflict's background, with some going back centuries before the war (and the 31st millennium) begins. In narrower scope, the entire conflict (including the Heresy proper and its proximate formative period), is depicted as having lasted less than a decade. With few exceptions, the sequence and dating of Heresy events is implied rather than stated in The Horus Heresy stories.
Titles
The following lists pertain to regular or general-availability UK first editions. For special and other editions, and additional information, see § Media and editions.
Book | Title | Author | Release date | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Horus Rising The seeds of heresy are sown | Dan Abnett |
| 412 pp. |
2 | False Gods The heresy takes root | Graham McNeill |
| 406 pp. |
3 | Galaxy in Flames The heresy revealed | Ben Counter |
| 407 pp. |
4 | The Flight of the Eisenstein The heresy unfolds | James Swallow |
| 407 pp. |
5 | Fulgrim Visions of Treachery | Graham McNeill |
| 510 pp. |
6 | Descent of Angels Loyalty and honour | Mitchel Scanlon |
| 413 pp. |
7 | Legion Secrets and lies | Dan Abnett |
| 412 pp. |
8 | Battle for the Abyss My brother, my enemy | Ben Counter |
| 411 pp. |
9 | Mechanicum Knowledge is power | Graham McNeill |
| 415 pp. |
10 | Tales of Heresy [Short story compilation] | Nick Kyme and Lindsey Priestley (editors) |
| 412 pp. |
11 | Fallen Angels Deceit and betrayal | Mike Lee |
| 412 pp. |
12 | A Thousand Sons All is dust... | Graham McNeill |
| 558 pp. |
13 | Nemesis War within the shadows | James Swallow |
| 507 pp. |
14 | The First Heretic Fall to Chaos | Aaron Dembski-Bowden |
| 502 pp. |
15 | Prospero Burns The Wolves unleashed | Dan Abnett |
| 444 pp. |
16 | Age of Darkness [Short story compilation] | Christian Dunn (editor) |
| 408 pp. |
17 | The Outcast Dead The truth lies within | Graham McNeill |
| 459 pp. |
18 | Deliverance Lost Ghosts of Terra | Gav Thorpe |
| 469 pp. |
19 | Know No Fear The battle of Calth | Dan Abnett |
| 412 pp. |
20 | The Primarchs [Novella compilation] | Christian Dunn (editor) |
| 440 pp. |
21 | Fear to Tread The angel falls | James Swallow |
| 508 pp. |
22 | Shadows of Treachery [Short story and novella compilation] | Christian Dunn and Nick Kyme (editors) |
| 409 pp. |
23 | Angel Exterminatus Flesh and iron | Graham McNeill |
| 416 pp. |
24 | Betrayer Blood for the Blood God | Aaron Dembski-Bowden |
| 448 pp. |
25 | Mark of Calth [Short story and novella compilation] | Laurie Goulding (editor) |
| 416 pp. |
26 | Vulkan Lives Unto the Anvil | Nick Kyme | August 2013 (audiobook, e-book, hardback, paperback) | 416 pp. |
27 | The Unremembered Empire A light in the darkness | Dan Abnett | October 2013 (e-book, hardback, paperback) | 416pp. |
28 | Scars A Legion divided | Chris Wraight | April 2014 (e-book, hardback, paperback) | 416 pp. |
29 | Vengeful Spirit The Battle of Molech | Graham McNeill | May 2014 (e-book,Audiobook, hardback, paperback) | 416 pp. |
30 | The Damnation of Pythos Thinning the veil | David Annandale | July 2014 (e-book, hardback, audio) | 416 pp. |
31 | Legacies of Betrayal Let the galaxy burn | Compilation | February 2015 (e-book, hardback) | 416 pp. |
32 | Deathfire Into the Ruinstorm | Nick Kyme | November 2015 (e-book, hardback, audio) | 416 pp. |
33 | War Without End Heresy begets retribution | Compilation |
| 544 pp. |
34 | Pharos The dying of the light | Guy Haley |
| 485 pp. |
35 | Eye of Terra I am the Emperor's vigilance | Compilation |
| 416 pp. |
36 | The Path of Heaven Riding out from the storm | Chris Wraight |
| 432 pp. |
37 | The Silent War Chosen of the Sigillite | Compilation |
| 480 pp. |
38 | Angels of Caliban Emperors and slaves | Gav Thorpe |
| 480 pp. |
39 | Praetorian of Dorn[6][7] Alpha to omega | John French |
| 512 pp. |
40 | Corax Nevermore | Gav Thorpe |
| 416 pp. |
41 | The Master of Mankind War in the webway | Aaron Dembski-Bowden |
| 416 pp. |
42 | Garro Weapon of fate | James Swallow |
| 384 pp. |
43 | Shattered Legions [Short story and novella compilation] | Laurie Goulding (editor) |
| 448 pp. |
44 | The Crimson King A soul divided | Graham McNeill |
| 496 pp. |
45 | Tallarn War for a dead world | John French |
| 416 pp. |
46 | Ruinstorm Destiny unwritten... | David Annandale |
| 384 pp. |
47 | Old Earth To the Gates of Terra | Nick Kyme |
| 400 pp. |
48 | The Burden of Loyalty [Short story and novella compilation] | Laurie Goulding (editor) |
| 432 pp. |
49 | Wolfsbane The wyrd spear cast | Guy Haley |
| 432 pp. |
50 | Born of Flame [Short story, novella, & novel compilation] | Nick Kyme |
| 464 pp. |
51 | Slaves to Darkness Chaos undivided | John French |
| 400 pp. |
52 | Heralds of the Siege [Short story compilation] | Nick Kyme and Laurie Goulding (editors) |
| 400 pp. |
53 | Titandeath The God Machines cometh | Guy Haley |
| 369 pp. |
54 | The Buried Dagger Doom of the Death Guard | James Swallow |
| 314 pp. |
55 | The Solar War Siege of Terra Book 1 | John French |
| 384 pp. |
56 | The Lost and the Damned Siege of Terra Book 2 | Guy Haley |
| 432 pp. |
Contributors
Contributors of the series include artists, audiobook narrators, and compilation or abridgement editors. Each may have contributed in stories that utilise different forms; where applicable, the number of (multiple) contributions per form – or other pertinent information – is indicated in parentheses.
Artists
- Karl Richardson – Internal illustrations ("premium" editions)
- Neil Roberts – Cover art, front matter illustration; main series artist (all titles except where cited otherwise)
- Philip Sibbering – Cover art, front matter illustration
- Adrian Wood – Front matter map
Audiobook narrators
- Gareth Armstrong – Unabridged novel (4), novella (2), short story (4)
- Sean Barrett – Novella
- Martyn Ellis – Abridged (3) and unabridged (1) novel, short story (3)
- Jonathan Keeble – Unabridged novel (3), novella, short story (6)
- David Timpson – Unabridged novel (2), novella, short story (3)
Editors
- Christian Dunn – Novel abridgement (3); mixed-form compilation, novella compilation, short story compilation
- Laurie Goulding – Mixed-form compilation
- Nick Kyme – Mixed-form compilation, short story compilation
- Lindsey Priestley – Short story compilation
Synopsis
Story setting
Early in the 31st millennium, the Galaxy is in the throes of the Great Crusade. Originating from Terra (Earth), it is an interstellar crusade that claims the galaxy as the rightful domain of Humankind, and aims to reunite the multitude of scattered human colonies remaining from earlier space exploration under the domain of an "Imperium of Man". Organised in numerous expeditions, the Crusade fields huge fleets and vast armies; at its forefront, led by the Primarchs, are Legions of Space Marines – genetically-enhanced supersoldiers numbering in the millions. Over the course of two Terran centuries, the Crusade has reached star systems more than 50,000 light years away from its original staging point in the Sol (Solar) System, has assimilated millions of worlds into the Imperium, and has given Humankind a dominant position among the galaxy's species. Its grand mastermind is the "Emperor of Mankind", a mysterious superhuman of unknown origin.[2]
The Emperor, founder and head of the Imperium, is a being of towering charisma, prowess, conviction, and ability. He has declared an agnostic worldview, the "Imperial Truth", which promotes science, rationalism, and human primacy.[8] Unknown to the common citizenry, he is also the most powerful human (or humanlike) psychic, referred to as psykers, and is overall one of the most formidable psychics in the galaxy. Officially, the Imperium denies the existence of psychic phenomena, including its manifestations as witchcraft and sorcery, and punishes its belief as ignorant and superstitious; yet the Imperium is also dependent on psychic activity in order to achieve faster-than-light travel between its scattered dominions. The Emperor knows that psychic phenomena originate in The Warp, a parallel dimension reflecting the events of the material world at its most emotional. Within the Warp exist Daemons, sentient vortices of concentrated feeling that are chiefly malignant. The Daemons are themselves in service to the Chaos Gods, also known as the Ruinous Powers, titanic collectives of dark will whose rulership over the parallel dimension is supreme. These malign immaterial entities forever seek to breach the material universe and subject all life within it to foul and debased whims. Awareness and perception of the Chaos Gods and their Daemons serves as the basis of numerous faiths and religions in the setting, both human and alien in origin. Knowing followers of the Chaos Gods, though rare, refer to their faith as the Primordial Truth, or the Primordial Annihilator.[9]
Humankind's continuing biological and psycho-spiritual evolution includes the gradual development of widespread Warp-related psychic abilities that will make the species far more susceptible to Chaotic influence; united under the Imperium of Man, the Emperor seeks to protect all of mankind by using faith in the Imperial Truth as a shield. The powers of Chaos desire change and conflict by nature, and seek to destabilise and subvert the Imperium's order over the galaxy from within.[5]
Book 1 to Book 10
1. Horus Rising: The seeds of heresy are sown
Horus Rising, the series opener, starts in the early years of the 31st millennium, during the 203rd year of the Great Crusade. It describes the rise to power of Horus Lupercal, Primarch of the "Luna Wolves" Legion of Space Marines, and the most versatile and favoured "son" of the Emperor. The Emperor has recently appointed him Warmaster, overall commander of Imperial military forces, while also leaving him in charge of the rest of the Crusade; the Emperor meanwhile returns to Terra, where in relative isolation he undertakes a secret project to which not even Horus is privy. The focus and perspective of the novel centres on a Space Marine Captain, Garviel Loken, leader of the Luna Wolves' 10th Company. He becomes a member of the Mournival, an informal advisory body to Horus, and participates in Crusade campaigns against anti-Imperial human populations and aliens, referred to in the series as "xenos". The story also hints at tensions in the nascent Imperium, exacerbated by the Emperor's absence and contentious actions and inactions – these are common themes in following books.[10]
2. False Gods: The heresy takes root
False Gods picks up a few weeks after the conclusion of Horus Rising in the series timeline, and tells the story of Horus' fall. In a complicated conspiracy implemented by followers of Chaos, Horus is mortally wounded during a Crusade mission by a Chaos-tainted xenos weapon. In a desperate action by his lieutenants to ensure his survival – one taken in strict contradiction to Imperial doctrine – Horus is brought to a local temple with a reputation for healing. The temple is the seat of a powerful Chaos cult, and both Horus' wound and its supposed healing makes him susceptible to Chaos' influence. He ultimately turns against his "father", the Emperor, and sets in motion the entire Heresy. This novel further highlights the institutional and personal tensions that accompany the Imperium's maturity into the preeminent power of the galaxy; they include rifts among the Primarchs, as well as both between and within their Space Marine Legions. Conflicts and characters flaws are repeatedly and effectively manipulated by Chaos in pursuit of their agenda throughout the series. A parallel storyline, also present in several other books, involves the growing influence – both within the Crusade Expeditionary forces and across the wider Imperium – of a forbidden religious cult, whose members, while loyal to the Emperor and Imperium, defy the Imperial Truth by worshipping the Emperor as a god.[11]
3. Galaxy in Flames: The heresy revealed
Galaxy in Flames starts shortly after the end of False Gods. It outlines the corrupted Warmaster's descent into madness, which leads to the fomentation of his plot to betray the Imperium. Horus pursues his secret planning of the rebellion in earnest, seeking and finding allies among his disgruntled fellow Primarchs, their Legions, and the Imperium's other organisations and key personalities. The novel details the first open move of the Heresy, the "Betrayal of Istvaan III", wherein factions of four Astartes Legions who were deemed unconvertible by their traitor brethren are ambushed during a planetary invasion of the fictional Isstvan star system. The novel marks the first distinguishment of the "Loyalists" and "Traitor" factions within the Legions and other rebel forces, including the unmodified soldiers of the Imperial Army.[12]
4. The Flight of the Eisenstein: The heresy unfolds
The Flight of the Eisenstein follows the eponymous Eisenstein, a space frigate of the "Death Guard" 14th Legion of Space Marines. The story follows the ship's escape from the Betrayal of Istvaan III, crewed by surviving loyalists of the four Legions present at the battle and commanded by Battle‑Captain Nathaniel Garro of the Death Guard 7th Company and one of the few Commanders in the Traitor Legions that remain loyal to the Emperor – followed by the perilous voyage the vessel must take across the galaxy in an effort to reach Terra and raise the alarm over the developing rebellion. Garro and the others on board the vessel face suspicion and incredulity from Imperial authorities; apart from the inconceivable news of Horus' betrayal, the situation is complicated by the fact that many of the travellers on the Eisenstein now openly proclaim their belief in the Emperor's divinity, itself a heresy.[13]
5. Fulgrim: Visions of Treachery
Fulgrim centers on the eponymous Primarch of the 3rd Legion, the "Emperor's Children". Characterised as flamboyant perfectionists, the novel tracks the descent of Fulgrim and his Legion into the service of Chaos roughly simultaneously with that of time Horus in (Book 2). Fulgrim is delivered a warning about Horus' imminent betrayal and the disaster that may follow by the alien Eldar race, but he and his staff dismiss it. The Emperor's Children eventually become the "Chosen" of Slaanesh, one of the four Gods of Chaos, with which Fulgrim is slowly and unwittingly drawn into grotesque communion. Primarch Ferrus Manus and his "Iron Hands" Space Marines (the 10th Legion) also play a prominent role in the novel as Fulgrim attempts to lure them into betrayal, and several other Primarchs and Legions make appearances. Described in passing is the pivotal Battle of Isstvaan V, also known as the Dropsite Massacre, where several entirely Loyalist Legions are slaughtered in another Traitor ambush in the Isstvan star system. The battle fully reveals the scale and ferocity of the rebellion.[14]
6. Descent of Angels: Loyalty and honour
Descent of Angels is a pre-Heresy story that concludes about 50 years before the start of that conflict. It introduces the "Dark Angels", first of the Space Marine Legions, and their Primarch Lion El'Jonson. The story is mainly told from the viewpoint of Zahariel El'Zurias, a native of the fictional planet Caliban. Caliban is an isolated, low-technology world that resembles a feudal medieval fantasy setting. Zahariel is introduced in the story as an Aspirant of the Order, an organisation of techno-barbarian knights. The first half of the novel is set on Caliban and covers the final battles of the Order under the leadership of Jonson, the future Primarch. The book's second half describes Caliban's unification with the Imperium of Man as well as the actions of the Dark Angels during the early years of the Great Crusade. In this part of the story, Zahariel, selected as a candidate Space Marine, is accepted as a Dark Angel Neophyte. A future schism within the Legion is intimated towards the end of the book.[15]
7. Legion: Secrets and lies
Legion focuses on the "Alpha Legion", the 20th and last of the Space Marine Legions. Characterised in earlier publications as clandestine and inscrutable, the book constitutes a major development of the entire canon of the setting with the revelation that the Legion's Primarch is actually a pair of twins, Alpharius and Omegon. The book also features the Imperial Army, the regular unmodified human fighting force of the Imperium, covering several officers and their units. Lastly, the novel introduces a new organisation to the setting, the enigmatic and ancient Cabal – an interspecies organisation opposed to Chaos. The human John Grammaticus is introduced as a prominent Cabal member. The story takes place over roughly a 6‑month period, about two years before the Heresy starts; it describes the events that eventually lead Alpharius and Omegon (publicly a single figure named Alpharius Omegon) to support Horus.
8. Battle for the Abyss: My brother, my enemy
Battle for the Abyss concerns the lead‑up to a Traitor invasion of Ultramar, a remote star system and the home base of the unshakeably-Loyalist 13th Legion, the "Ultramarines" (Book 19 and 24). Early in the Heresy, the Traitor Word Bearers Legion is tasked with organising and leading the invasion; they plan to use an immense, secretly commissioned warship, the Furious Abyss, to spearhead the surprise attack. The vessel, commanded by Fleet Captain Zadkiel, launches from shipyards near Jupiter around the time of the events on Isstvan III (Book 3), and sets course for Macragge, Ultramar's capital world. Leading the cast of Loyalist protagonists is Cestus, Fleet Commander and Captain of the 7th Company of the Ultramarines. They become aware of the powerful capital ship's true purpose, and engage in long pursuit; they will seek to prevent the Furious Abyss from participating in the invasion and from reaching Macragge.
9. Mechanicum: Knowledge is power
Mechanicum is the first book in the series not to focus on either the Primarchs or their Space Marines Legions. The novel centres on the eponymous "Mechanicum", a cult of machine-worshipping technologists based on the real-life planet Mars and which serves as the chief engineering authority in the nascent Imperium. The machinations of Horus and the Chaos-worshipping Traitors affects the Martian cult as much as every other Imperial organisation, leading to a civil war on Mars itself. Kelbor-Hal, Fabricator General of Mars and the technocracy's supreme leader, declares for Horus, and together they carry out a coup d'état to eliminate Techpriest and Magos adherents of the Cult who are loyal to Terra and the Emperor. As the Mechanicum is the sole power responsible for all civil and military technology in the Imperium, the conflict has vast implications for whichever side of the broader intergalactic civil war receives Mars' crucial support.[16][17]
10. Tales of Heresy
Tales of Heresy is a collection of short stories introducing and expanding upon numerous threads within the greater happenings of the Heresy. Various stories centre on the Custodian Guard, the elite Praetorian Guard-esque retinue of the Emperor, and the Sisters of Silence, a classified Imperial organisation of anti-psychic warrior‑nuns originally introduced in Book 4. Most stories are concurrent with the Heresy, with some occurring in the years prior. It includes two stories that take place on Terra, one of which occurs long before the Heresy and adds to the background regarding the Imperial Truth; another entry in the compilation is a Primarch origin story, covering the contentious circumstances under which the gladiatorial Primarch Angron takes command of the 12th Space Marine Legion, which he renames from the "Warhounds" to the "World Eaters". The book contains seven stories by various authors;[18] several stories relate to full-length novels in the series.
This anthology contains the following stories: Blood Games by Dan Abnett, Wolf at the Door by Mike Lee, Scions of the Storm by Anthony Reynolds, The Voice by James Swallow, Call of the Lion by Gav Thorpe, The Last Church by Graham McNeill and After Desh'ea by Matthew Farrer.
Book 11 to Book 20
11. Fallen Angels: Deceit and betrayal
Fallen Angels continues the Dark Angels tale begun in Book 6, Descent of Angels. The novel starts around the time of Book 6's conclusion, about 50 years before the Heresy, but forwards to just about the time of the Heresy's beginning in the opening chapters. It tells two stories: one concerns the effort of Primarch Lion El'Jonson and a small group of Dark Angels to deny a forge world (a planet devoted to manufacturing, especially of weapons) to Horus' forces; the other is the story of Luther (Lion El'Jonson's second), Zahariel El'Zurias (by now a full Space Marine), and a Dark Angels contingent sent back to Caliban, the Dark Angels Legion home world. They get involved in the fight against a growing insurgency that seeks to free the planet from under the Imperium's thumb.
12. A Thousand Sons: All is dust...
A Thousand Sons is the story of Primarch Magnus and the "Thousand Sons" Space Marines, the 15th Legion; it mainly takes place before the Heresy begins. Following a reprimand by the Emperor for dabbling in sorcery, Magnus and his Legion secretly continue to study the forbidden subjects. Then, around the time of Horus' corruption (Book 2), Magnus learns through sorcery of his brother's impending betrayal. He tries – again through sorcery – to warn the Emperor, believing that the gravity of the news justifies his disobedience. However, he overreaches with his powers and damages the vital and secret project the Emperor is undertaking (Book 1), endangering the safety of Terra itself in the process. The Emperor is enraged and orders Leman Russ, Primarch of the 6th Legion (the "Space Wolves"), to Prospero, the Thousand Sons Legion's in‑series home world. The Space Wolves, accompanied by other Imperial forces, are to bring Magnus and his Legion to Terra to account for themselves.[19][20]
13. Nemesis: War within the shadows
Nemesis is set about two years after the events on Isstvan V described in Book 5, Fulgrim. It is a look at the war behind the war, the covert operations undertaken by the opposing sides in order to influence the visible conflict. Specifically, it deals with a plan by a secret Imperial organisation, the Officio Assassinorum, to eliminate Horus; an "Execution Force" consisting of operatives from all of the Officio's disciplines, and led by top-rated sniper Eristede Kell, is tasked with the mission. There have been several previous unsuccessful attempts against Horus' life, and this gives a high-ranking officer of the Traitor Word Bearers Legion the idea to field a nemesis weapon of his own: a highly specialised assassin, who is to be used in an audacious scheme to kill the Emperor.[21]
14. The First Heretic: Fall to Chaos
The First Heretic details the fall to Chaos of Primarch Lorgar and the 17th Space Marine Legion, the "Word Bearers". Decades before the start of the rebellion they become heretics relative to the Imperial Truth by introducing religious worship. This results in public and humiliating censure of Lorgar and the entire assembled Legion, by the Emperor himself. The despairing Lorgar is subsequently swayed by two of his most trusted lieutenants, who are in secret allegiance with Chaos; eventually both Primarch and Legion covertly embrace (and promote) the Primordial Truth, many years before Horus' corruption. The story is largely told from the point of view of Argel Tal, a Captain of the Word Bearers, who becomes commander of a Chaos-possessed elite Legion unit. It spans several decades, starting 43 years before the events on Isstvan V (Book 5) and concluding around the time the Word Bearers are on their way to assault Calth (Book 19).[22]
15. Prospero Burns: The Wolves unleashed
Prospero Burns is part of the story arc of Book 12, however it follows a different but related timeline. The story begins more than a century before the Space Wolves-led mission to Prospero, and the concurrent start of the Heresy. It is presented from the point of view of Kasper Hawser, formerly a noted Terran academic who becomes a Crusade Remembrancer, and then the Oral Historian or skjald of the 3rd Company of the Space Wolves Legion. On the surface it is his story; the important understory concerns the long-term machinations of Chaos, whose aim is the destruction of both Space Wolves and Thousand Sons. Chaos attempts to exploit the weaknesses of the Primarchs and their Legions in order to pit them against each other – the ultimate result is the confrontation on Prospero. While this confrontation is taking place, Horus' previously covert rebellion becomes visible (Book 3). The novel also adds background to Horus' fall and to the planning of the Heresy campaign by Chaos and its forces.[20]
16. Age of Darkness
Age of Darkness is a compilation of nine short stories by various authors.[23] They take place during the seven‑year period between the Dropsite Massacre on Isstvan V (Book 5), and the conclusion of Horus' campaign. The stories present various facets of the unfolding conflict, as suspicion, insecurity, and paranoia spread through the galaxy on the wake of the Warmaster's betrayal. Subjects include: a Primarch prepares for the end of the Imperium; a Traitor PSYOP topples an Imperial planet; an unusual diplomatic contest will decide which side will be chosen by a world on the fence; a non-combatant may be a rebel agent or a herald of unpalatable truths for the Imperium; a Loyalist Space Marine in a Traitor Legion holds his own against his erstwhile brothers. Several of the included stories are linked through continuity; some are also prequels or sequels to stories in other series books.[24][25]
This anthology contains the following stories: Rules of Engagement by Graham McNeill, Liar's Due by James Swallow, Forgotten Sons by Nick Kyme, The Last Remembrancer by John French, Rebirth by Chris Wraight, The Face of Treachery by Gav Thorpe, Little Horus by Dan Abnett, The Iron Within by Rob Sanders, Savage Weapons by Aaron Dembski-Bowden.
17. The Outcast Dead: The truth lies within
The Outcast Dead is the first novel-length story in the series to take place almost entirely on Terra. It covers a relatively short period, starting several months before Magnus' catastrophic psychic visit at the Imperial Palace (Book 12), and concluding several months after this event. The unauthorised visit is central to the story: apart from damaging the Emperor's top secret project (Book 1) and the planet's defense, it massively disrupts Terra's long-range communications infrastructure. The ensuing isolation and confusion cause indecision and delays for the Loyalist side. The story's main character is Kai Zulane, previously a gifted Imperial astropath attached to the Ultramarines Legion. He unwittingly becomes the keeper of a secret that could decide the victor in the developing galactic civil war. The secret has additional implications regarding the Heresy's conclusion and the future course of the Imperium of Man. "The Outcast Dead" are other protagonists: a small, disparate group of Space Marines suspected as traitors, with whom Zulane falls in during the second half of the book.[26][27]
18. Deliverance Lost: Ghosts of Terra
Deliverance Lost is mainly concerned with the actions of Primarch Corvus Corax and his Space Marine Command, the 19th Legion or "Raven Guard", during the year following the Dropsite Massacre (Book 5). However, operatives and the Primarch of the Alpha Legion play a prominent role. The story starts about 3 months after the Dropsite Massacre, with the unexpected rescue of Corax and the remnants of his Legion (at less than 5% strength due to casualties in that battle). Arriving at Terra a few months after the events described in The Outcast Dead take place, Corax convinces the Emperor to impart to him the knowledge and material that may accelerate the rebuilding of his Legion. The second part of the novel describes the effort to reconstitute the Raven Guard, undertaken on Deliverance (its home world in Warhammer 40,000 fiction), and the pursuit of opposite objectives by the Alpha Legion. The novel features the reappearance of The Cabal (Book 7), and of other well-known characters; it also adds information about the developing strategies and subterfuge applied by the opposing sides, including reasons for Horus' timetable and for the Emperor's actions during the initial stages of the Heresy.
19. Know No Fear: The battle of Calth
Know No Fear documents the rebels' surprise assault on Calth, an ascendant Ultramar system world. It is planned and led by the Traitor Word Bearers Legion, now fully and openly committed to the spread of the Primordial Truth. The narrative starts close to where the timelines of Book 8 and Book 14 converge (in their respective conclusions), with the invasion force en route to, or near the planet. The rebel mission has aims beyond just delivering a crippling blow to the Ultramarines Legion and their home system; its objectives may affect the entire Heresy campaign. The story tracks the Calth assault from its opening covert phases, and the actions of several characters. Unaware of the developing rebellion and the Word Bearers' true role and allegiance, Primarch Roboute Guilliman and his Ultramarines are unprepared for the underhand invasion: it is total, bloody war, with ritualistic undertones, scorched earth tactics, decisive use of technology, and the considerable involvement of Chaos; the inconceivable treachery and its implications forever change the Loyalists' view of reality.[28]
20. The Primarchs
The Primarchs is a compilation of four novellas by different authors, each story starring one of the "sons" of the Emperor.[29] The novellas further develop these characters, who make multiple appearances in the series: following the Dropsite Massacre (Book 5), Fulgrim, perversely empowered by his own corruption, reveals his true nature and future plans to top officers of his compromised Legion; during a Great Crusade campaign against the enigmatic Eldar, Ferrus Manus, already beset by unsettling dreams, is subjected by alien sorcerers to stark, portentous visions and warnings about his future and role in the soon to be revealed Heresy; with Horus' rebellion in full swing after the events of Isstvan V, a suspicious and isolated Lion El'Jonson accepts the newly revealed realities of the Warp and decides on an independent course of action for the Dark Angels in the unfolding conflict; around the same time, and plotting a typically indecipherable course in the expanding war, the twinned Primarch of the Alpha Legion is involved in a unique counterintelligence operation that extends the Legion's customary deceptions inwards.[30]
This anthology contains the following stories: The Reflection Crack’d by Graham McNeill, Feat of Iron by Nick Kyme, The Lion by Gav Thorpe and The Serpent Beneath by Rob Sanders.
Book 21 to Book 30
21. Fear to Tread: The angel falls
Fear to Tread describes an operation by the forces of Chaos that is supposed to turn Primarch Sanguinius and the 9th Space Marine Legion, the "Blood Angels", to their cause. To succeed, Chaos plans to take advantage of a genetic flaw in Sanguinius' and the Legion's DNA. As the Heresy is getting under way, the outwardly still loyal Warmaster orders the entire 9th Legion and their unsuspecting Primarch to a remote star system. There they find themselves isolated and ambushed, fighting a new kind of war – against Chaos entities and daemons – designed to trigger the Legion's flaw. The plan almost succeeds; yet conflicting agendas among anti-Imperial protagonists, as well as the fortitude and unorthodox tactics of quick-to-adapt Blood Angels, narrowly result in Loyalist victory. In the meantime Horus' rebellion erupts openly and the Loyalists suffer catastrophic losses in the Dropsite Massacre (Book 5). Sanguinius and his Legion, now fully aware of the great betrayal and the reality of Chaos, race to the defense of Terra and the Emperor while buffeted by unprecedented navigational difficulties; it is hinted that these are related to the action in the Ultramar system of Calth (Books 19 and 24).[31]
22. Shadows of Treachery
Shadows of Treachery is a compilation that collects five short stories previously published in limited editions, art books, or other formats, and also contains two new novellas.[32] Most of the stories involve the 7th or 8th Space Marine Legions, respectively the Loyalist "Imperial Fists" and Traitor "Night Lords", and their Primarchs Rogal Dorn and Konrad Curze. Other Legions and Primarchs are also featured, while one short story takes place on Mars and illuminates an aspect of the Traitor Mechanicum's conspiracy. One of the novellas is mainly about an all-out close-quarters space battle, between a Loyalist Retribution Fleet sent to punish Horus following the events of Isstvan III (Book 3) and the Traitor fleet that ambushes it; the other new novella deals with the aftermath of another naval engagement in space that cripples the Night Lords Legion. The narratives of all stories fill gaps in the series or add further details about the Heresy and its actors; they cover periods that range from several decades before the conflict to around the time frame of Book 18 (one short story is a prequel to that novel).[33]
This anthology contains the following stories: The Crimson Fist by John French, The Dark King by Graham McNeill, The Lightning Tower by Dan Abnett, The Kaban Project by Graham McNeill, Raven's Flight by Gav Thorpe, Death of a Silversmith by Graham McNeill and Prince of Crows by Aaron Dembski-Bowden.
23. Angel Exterminatus: Flesh and iron
Angel Exterminatus covers a Traitor operation in uncharted and dangerous galactic space, that may purportedly decide the war in favour of the rebels. The story provides further glimpses of disparate motivations and conflicting objectives among traitor factions as the Heresy campaign continues. It is taking place some time after the Dropsite Massacre (Book 5), shortly following the events described by two novellas (Books 20 and 22).[34] Featured are the 4th Legion of Space Marines, the "Iron Warriors", renowned siege masters of the Great Crusade, and their Primarch Perturabo. However the core plot is set in motion by Fulgrim and the Emperor's Children, who share the spotlight. The embittered Iron Warriors have aligned with Horus out of frustration with the ignominious and unheralded role assigned them by the Imperium; before the story begins, they lash out in unforgivable genocide. In the story, they are invited to the freelance operation (which is unknown to the Warmaster) by Fulgrim and his Legion, who have their own agenda. The operation's true goal is kept secret from Perturabo and his Space Marines, who come to realise that not all fellow rebels can be trusted. A side thread involves Fabius Bile, the chief medical officer of the Emperor's Children, and the Traitors' top geneticist; he is on a no-holds-barred quest to exceed the Emperor's genetic achievements.[35]
24. Betrayer: Blood for the Blood God
Betrayer returns the series to the action in the Ultramar theatre; it starts around the time the events of Book 19 begin to unfold. Unlike that story, Betrayer is presented from the perspective of the rebels, in this case the World Eaters and Word Bearers Legions, and often through the particular viewpoint of Khârn, Captain of the 8th Company of the World Eaters and Equerry to Primarch Angron. In tenuous and fragile cooperation, the two very different Traitor Legions lay waste to worlds across Ultramar; it is a "Shadow Crusade" meticulously planned by Primarch Lorgar of the Word Bearers, who deploys Abyss-class spaceships. The campaign's strategic goal is the destruction or isolation of the powerful Ultramarines Legion, its home star system, and the system's considerable resources; removing Ultramar as a factor in the war is one of Horus' primary objectives. The scheming Primarch of the Word Bearers orchestrates genocide in unprecedented scale, as a way to summon the powers of Chaos. With their help, he hopes to generate the so-called Ruinstorm, an immense interdimensional disturbance that will create an impenetrable veil around Ultramar. As the final piece of his plan, Lorgar engineers the "ascension" into daemonhood of the increasingly unstable Angron: the event is to act as the conduit for the unnatural storm.[36][37]
25. Mark of Calth
Mark of Calth is the fifth compilation to appear in the series; it contains seven short stories and one novella, each by a different author.[38] The stories further describe aspects of the rebels' Ultramar campaign, as close prequels or sequels of Books 19 and 24. "Premium" editions and the e‑audiobook version were released April 2013; text-based general release editions were expected mid-to-late 2013.[39][40]
This anthology contains the following stories: The Shards of Erebus by Guy Haley, Calth That Was by Graham McNeill, Dark Heart by Anthony Reynolds, The Traveller by David Annandale, A Deeper Darkness by Rob Sanders, The Underworld War by Aaron Dembski-Bowden and Unmarked by Dan Abnett.
26. Vulkan Lives: Unto the Anvil
Vulkan Lives is the first book where the story of Vulkan is shown with a significant background. His memories coming back to him after his capture by his brother Konrad Curze aboard his ship modified by Perturabo himself. He learns more about his immortality, which seems to be a gift and a curse, one he preferred not to bear at all. The book adds more background concerning the battle at Istvaan V, at the same time showing the drama of a squad of his surviving sons and the shattered legions while they fight to retrieve an unknown artifact that will change the course of history in the coming days of the rebellion.
27. The Unremembered Empire: A light in the darkness
Unremembered Empire happens after the events of the Battle of Phall, the Lion's capture of Konrad Curze, the return of Guilliman to Maccragge after the battle for Armatura and the Blood Angels trial at the battle for Signus Prime. An ancient device has been found on Sotha, one which could guide the mighty warships out of the impenetrable veil that cut off Ultramar from the rest of the Imperium. Strange events start to happen after the arrival of members of the Cabal organization; a Word Bearer Legionnaire seeking redemption for his Legion and the Night Lords' Primarch begin their search for an unknown "object" that fell from orbit straight to the hands of Guilliman. Secrecy between him and the Lion might bring undesired conflict between the brothers in this time of treachery, while Sanguinius manage to come back from his trial on Signus Cluster to learn from Guilliman's plan for a new Empire.
28. Scars: A Legion divided
29. Vengeful Spirit: The Battle of Molech
30. The Damnation of Pythos: Thinning the veil
Book 31 to Book 40
31. Legacies of Betrayal: Let the galaxy burn
32. Deathfire: Into the Ruinstorm
33. War Without End: Heresy begets retribution
34. Pharos: The dying of the light
35. Eye of Terra: I am the Emperor's vigilance
36. The Path of Heaven: Riding Out from the Storm
37. The Silent War: Chosen of the Sigillite
38. Angels of Caliban: Emperors and slaves
39. Praetorian of Dorn: Alpha to omega
40. Corax: Nevermore
Book 41 to Book 54
41. The Master of Mankind: War in the webway
42. Garro: Weapon of fate
43. Shattered Legions
44. The Crimson King: A soul divided
45. Tallarn: War for a dead world
46. Ruinstorm: Destiny unwritten...
47. Old Earth: To the Gates of Terra
Old Earth tells the story of the newly resurrected Vulkan, who is compelled to leave his homeworld and his legion behind and return to fulfill his destiny at Terra. To break through the ruinstorm, which is keeping the throneworld inaccessible via the warp, he must make use of ancient Eldar pathways, where humans are not welcome. En route he seeks aid from Shadrak Meduson and the Iron Tenth, who continue to harass the traitorous Sons of Horus with guerrilla tactics. But Shadrak is facing internal resistance to his attempts to revitalise the Iron Hands, while at the same time seeking a showdown with his nemesis Tybalt Marr.
48. The Burden of Loyalty
49. Wolfsbane: The wyrd spear cast
50. Born of Flame: The Hammer and the Anvil
51. Slaves to Darkness: Chaos undivided
52. Heralds of the Siege
53. Titandeath: The God Machines cometh
54. Buried Dagger: Doom of the Death Guard
The Buried Dagger is set immediately before the events of the Siege of Terra, and follows the Perspective of the "Death Guard" Legion. The book is divided into three distinct parts, the first is the narration of Mortarion, Primarch of the Death Guard, about his childhood on Barbarus, a planet with a toxic atmosphere and ruled by tyrannical warlords, and his attempt to liberate its people, culminating with meeting the Emperor, who kills the last Warlord, as Mortarion risks finally succumbing to the poisonous atmosphere. The second part, however, is set prior to the Siege of Terra, and follows Mortarion and the Death Guard slowly succumbing to debilitating diseases as their ships malfunction in a journey through the Warp. It is revealed at the end that Typhus, who Mortarion had known since Barbarus, had sabotaged the systems to become favoured of the Plague God Nurgle. This part of the story ends with a mirror of the first, as Mortarion swears loyalty to Nurgle, before he succumbs to the diseases that would otherwise condemn him to undeath. The third part of the story is largely unrelated to the Death Guard, and follows Garviel Loken, alongside several other characters, as they form the Grey Knights Chapter of Space Marines.
Book 55 onwards: Siege of Terra
55. The Solar War
56. The Lost and the Damned
57. The First Wall
58. Saturnine
59. Mortis
Media and editions
Series titles are released in multiple versions: in print as paperbacks and hardcovers (with paperback editions printed in mass-market and trade formats); as e-books; and as either abridged or unabridged audiobooks and e‑audiobooks (respectively, in compact disc and audio file formats – the Black Library has partnered with specialist UK company Heavy Entertainment for audio production).
As of April 2013, print editions were generally between 400 and 500 pages, though some mass market versions have rendered in more; total series length in first paperback edition was about 10,600 print pages (24 titles). Digital editions ranged in size from less than a megabyte (some e‑book releases) to over a gigabyte (some e‑audiobook releases); the totals run from a low of about 10 MB (for 22 e-book titles, in EPUB format) to a high of about 11 GB (for 13 unabridged titles, in MP3 format). Durations of audio versions spread from about 6 hours for the abridged editions to anywhere between 11 and 19 hours for the unabridged editions; the total length of the unabridged edition was about 168 hours, divided among 13 titles. CD audiobooks were published in packages of 5 discs per abridged title; two unabridged titles were available on CD, with the longest packaged in 13 discs.[41][42]
Outside the UK, series titles are published in several countries and languages by Black Library divisions or as co-editions with local associates. As of April 2013, other-language renditions lagged the English-language series in the number of released titles, and had followed distinct publication schedules and release sequences. Also as of April 2013, editions in other languages were published in paperback and e‑book formats.
Starting November 2010, new titles have often been released simultaneously in multiple media; occasionally since then, new titles' digital or audio releases have preceded the print versions, in reverse of previous practice (see table "Published" above). Stories in series compilations have also been published individually, as e‑books, and as MP3 or CD "audio shorts".
Series stories have appeared in whole or in part in other Black Library publications, sometimes before the corresponding series books have become generally available; prepublications have included stand-alone releases of compilation stories. "Prerelease" copies of series volumes have been regularly offered months before official publication, in Games Workshop- and Black Library‑sponsored events such as the various Games Days.[43]
There have been a number of special editions and bundles published in a variety of media; bundles have included the "Horus Heresy Collections", which mix editions and media of the same or different titles. Certain special editions are available in limited distribution months before the release of the corresponding regular, or wider-release, versions.
The books' cover art has been separately released, in poster and other formats. Series bundles and special offers have also contained the separate artwork releases of the included titles.[39][40]
"Premium" editions
English-language series releases include publishing of the titles in special "premium" editions: "Premium Hardback" (print) and "Enhanced Ebook" (digital). These versions contain additional material and artwork, and are published several months before their general-availability or regular edition counterparts. The first title to appear in "premium" editions, in October 2012, was Angel Exterminatus (Book 23). The earlier catalogue of the series is also republished in these editions, again beginning October 2012 with the series-opening novel trilogy.[44][45][40]
Other special editions (selections)
- Horus Rising – Dan Abnett. "5th Anniversary Edition" to mark the 5‑year publishing history of the series. With "'titanium blue' foil treatment on the cover" and it includes "an exclusive new introduction by author Dan Abnett"[46][45] – April 2011[47]
- Limited Edition Horus Heresy Audio Boxset – Dan Abnett, Ben Counter, Graham McNeill. Contains the abridged CD‑audio versions of the series' opening trilogy narrated by Martyn Ellis. Abridged by Christian Dunn. Includes an exclusive bonus CD containing the short story "Little Horus" by Abnett, from the Age of Darkness compilation, also read by Ellis. Total duration is about 18 hours, contained in 16 discs. Edition limited to 2,000 copies worldwide[48] – November 2011[49]
- Xmas 2011 Horus Heresy eBundle – Series authors. E‑book edition of the first 17 Books in the series. One of several series bundles, this was offered as a "Christmas 2011 Special" – November 2011[50]
Reception
Several novels in The Horus Heresy series have appeared in UK and US science fiction charts, have occupied high positions in Nielsen BookScan genre lists, and since early 2010 have often charted in The New York Times Bestseller List for mass-market paperbacks.
Critical reception of individual titles has been mixed, yet the general tone of reviews has been mostly positive. Although the series overall has been viewed favourably, there have been complaints about its length, the multitude of characters and narrative threads, and the timeline jumps or repetitions caused by the nonlinear storytelling.[51] The evolving series is said to have gradually acquired a backstory and terminology of its own; this has led reviewers to question the accessibility of individual stories to new or casual readers.[52]
Sales
Early in its publishing history, the series became a sales success in its category. Horus Rising by Dan Abnett, the opening title, set the pace shortly after its release, topping Locus magazine's "Locus Bestsellers: Gaming-Related" list of August 2006; as of Book 22 (September 2012), practically every title in the series had achieved the same or similar performance on this chart.[53] Horus Rising's January 2011 CD audiobook release also appeared in ranked sales lists: the (abridged) edition was number 15 in a related chart published by The Bookseller, covering 2011 UK sales up to September.[54]
Legion by Abnett, and Battle for the Abyss by Ben Counter, were listed in Nielsen BookScan's list of top‑20 fictional works by small publishers for the year ending 23 August 2008; the books appeared in eighth and sixteenth place respectively.[55] The next published title, Mechanicum by Graham McNeill, entered The Bookseller's "Top 20 Fiction Heatseekers" chart of 5 December 2008, shortly after its release, at number 10; series titles have consistently appeared in this list.[56]
A Thousand Sons by McNeill was released in February 2010 and arrived at number 22 on The New York Times Bestseller List, the first ever novel on the Black Library imprint to do so.[57] Nemesis by James Swallow followed, reaching number 26 on the List in August 2010. The First Heretic, by Aaron Dembski‑Bowden, reached number 28 in the weekly chart in November 2010 and stayed on the List for a second week, at number 33. Abnett's Prospero Burns was next, reaching number 16 in January 2011; this title also topped a science fiction and fantasy book chart published by The Times (London) in March of the same year.[58]
The compilation Age of Darkness, edited by Christian Dunn, also entered The New York Times Best Sellers List, in May 2011, at number 31. Book 19, Know No Fear, again by Abnett, continued the trend: it appeared at number 21 in March 2012. It was followed on the List by the next series title, The Primarchs, a compilation edited by Dunn, which occupied position 29 during the week of 17 June 2012; in addition, The Primarchs had placed first in Publishers Weekly's science fiction bestsellers listing for the week of 28 May 2012.[59] In September 2012 Fear to Tread by Swallow entered The New York Times Best Sellers List at number 13, at the time the highest entry on that chart for a series novel; the book remained on the List the week after (week of September 23), at number 33.[60]
Related works
Between the late–1980s introduction of the Horus Heresy and the start of this series publication in 2006, Games Workshop and affiliates released Horus Heresy-branded products that expanded the concept's standing as Warhammer 40,000 background material.[61] The release of such works, which include literature independent of this series, continued as of 2013; the works may relate to it as prequels, sequels, or expansions of its stories.
Pre-series Horus Heresy literature and other related works may have been superseded or rendered obsolete, while other similar material may no longer be authoritative even as it remains in Horus Heresy and Warhammer 40,000 canons;[62] still other non-series Horus Heresy material has been eventually incorporated into the work.[32]
A significant development was the 2012 initial release of the Horus Heresy miniatures wargame expansion, which repositioned the concept as a foreground element within the Warhammer 40,000 gaming system – while highlighting the importance of the Horus Heresy to Games Workshop's product lineup and the related universe.[63] The expansion is reputedly developed in coordination with the book series, and includes new material and information about the Horus Heresy and the fictional universe; it joins the series and other works as an authoritative source of Heresy material and Warhammer 40,000 background.[64]
The Black Library and Games Workshop have released novels, game rulebooks, and other products not branded or classified as Horus Heresy, yet directly relating to story arcs or events described in the series. An example is listed in the section below.
Selections
- Collected Visions: Iconic Images of the Imperium, Betrayal and War – Alan Merrett (writer), John Blanche (conceptual art), Nick Kyme and Matt Ralphs (editors), and many additional contributors. Omnibus edition of the four-volume Horus Heresy art book series (2004–06); it outlines the entire Horus Heresy in art and prose. As of February 2013 it was partially superseded, amended, or expanded by the continuing book series and the newer Horus Heresy rulebook series (see below). As of the same month it remained the most comprehensive official roadmap for the complete Heresy storyline – June 2007[65]
- Battle of the Fang – Chris Wraight. Warhammer 40,000 novel in the Space Marine Battles series. The story takes place a thousand years after the Horus Heresy, and is a continuation of the arc presented in Books 12 (A Thousand Sons), and 15 (Prospero Burns) – June 2011[66]
- Aurelian – Aaron Dembski‑Bowden. Subtitled The Eye stares back, this "Horus Heresy novella" is part of a story arc along with The First Heretic, Book 14 in the series – October 2011[67]
- Betrayal – Alan Bligh (writer), and Forge World artists and designers. "Volume One" in the Horus Heresy rulebook series. This series is part of the stand-alone Horus Heresy expansion for the Warhammer 40,000 game system; the expansion is produced by Games Workshop modelling subsidiary Forge World. Betrayal is centered on the events of Isstvan III, also described in Galaxy in Flames, Book 3 of the book series – September 2012[68]
See also
Notes
- Gronli, Jonathan (November 20, 2008). "Horus Heresy novel series wrapup". Technology Tell. Archived from the original on May 7, 2016. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
- Merrett, Alan (2007). Kyme, Nick & Ralphs, Matt (eds.). Collected visions: iconic images of the imperium, betrayal and war (hardcover)
|format=
requires|url=
(help) (print). Horus Heresy [art book series]. 1–4. Cover art & illustrations by Games Workshop staff artists & designers; includes short stories by Graham McNeill; illustrations by Sabertooth Games staff artists (omnibus ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-424-0. - McNish, Cliff (May 19, 2011). "Cliff McNish's top 10 most frightening books for teenagers". The Guardian. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
- Wolff, Karl (6 September 2009). "Book Review: Descent of Angels (The Horus Heresy, Book 6) by Mitchel Scanlon". Blogcritics. Retrieved 14 January 2016.
- Troke, Adam; Vetock, Jeremy; Ward, Mat (2012). Warhammer 40,000 Rulebook (6th ed.). Nottingham: Games Workshop. ISBN 978-1-907964-79-4.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-08-24. Retrieved 2016-09-03.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- French, John (2018-02-27). Praetorian of Dorn. ISBN 9781784966423.
- Abnett, Dan (2006). Horus Rising. Black Library. ISBN 1844164985.
- Abnett, Dan (2008). Legion. Black Library. ISBN 978-1844165360.
- Scholes, Sandra (6 March 2013). "Horus Rising by Dan Abnett. Book review". British Fantasy Society. Retrieved 14 January 2016.
- Gronli, Johnathan (22 August 2008). "Gamertell Review: The Horus Heresy: False Gods by Graham McNeill". TechnologyTell. Retrieved 14 January 2016.
- Brief review of the abridged CD-audio edition: Internet Bookwatch 2012 (positive).
- Review: Rhoads 2012 (mostly positive).
- In some editions, Book 5 is subtitled The last Phoenix, see Fulgrim: the last phoenix in libraries (WorldCat catalog). Retrieved February 7, 2012; the subtitle Visions of treachery is also the title of Book 3 in the Horus Heresy art book series.
- Review: Wolff 2009 (neutral).
- In some editions, Book 9 is subtitled Knowledge is power, see Mechanicum: [knowledge is power] in libraries (WorldCat catalog). Retrieved February 7, 2012.
- Review: Wolff 2011 (positive).
- "Blood Games" by Dan Abnett; "Wolf at the Door" by Mike Lee; "Scions of the Storm" by Anthony Reynolds; "The Voice" by James Swallow; "Call of the Lion" by Gav Thorpe; "The Last Church" by Graham McNeill; and "After Desh’ea" by Matt Farrer (Kyme & Priestley 2009, § "Contents")
- Review: EIW 2010 (mostly positive).
- Combined review of A Thousand Sons and Prospero Burns CD-audio editions: Fortune n.d. (positive).
- Review: Gronli 2010b (mixed).
- Review: Rudden 2012 (positive).
- "Rules of Engagement" by Graham McNeill; "Liar's Due" by James Swallow; "Forgotten Sons" by Nick Kyme; "The Last Remembrancer" by John French; "Rebirth" by Chris Wraight; "The Face of Treachery" by Gav Thorpe; "Little Horus" by Dan Abnett; "The Iron Within" by Rob Sanders; and "Savage Weapons" by Aaron Dembski‑Bowden (Dunn & 2011-1, § "Contents"). One story, "The Iron Within", was prepublished in Hammer and Bolter, a Black Library e‑magazine, in February 2011 (Sanders 2011); "The Last Remembrancer" was included in the same magazine's May 2011 issue, published simultaneously with the series book (French 2011).
- McNeill, Graham (2011a). "Rules of Engagement". In Dunn & 2011-3 (ed.). pp. 9–63 Missing or empty
|title=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) (although published before Book 19, Know No Fear, it mainly deals with that novel's aftermath); Wraight, Chris (2011a). "Rebirth". In Dunn & 2011-3 (ed.). pp. 203–246 Missing or empty|title=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) (sequel to Prospero Burns); Thorpe, Gav (2011). "The Face of Treachery". In Dunn & 2011-3 (ed.). pp. 247–276 Missing or empty|title=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) (prequel to Deliverance Lost). - Review: Flory 2011 (positive).
- Reputed continuity problems introduced in the series by story elements in The Outcast Dead have been the subject of discussion among the Warhammer 40,000 fan community (Antigonos et al. 2011); see also Dembski-Bowden (2012a, § "Author's Note", p. 9)
- Review of the e‑audio edition: Dean 2011 (mixed).
- Review: Fortune 2012 (positive).
- "The Reflection Crack'd" by Graham McNeill; "Feat of Iron" by Nick Kyme; "The Lion" by Gav Thorpe; and "The Serpent Beneath" by Rob Sanders (Dunn & 2012-3, § "Contents"). "Feat of Iron" complements a non-series Horus Heresy novella by the same author (Kyme 2011b); "The Lion" was prepublished in digital format, as a Hammer and Bolter serial (Thorpe 2012b).
- Review: Dean 2012 (negative).
- Review: Sharps 2012 (positive).
- Short stories: "The Dark King", "The Kaban Project", and "Death of a Silversmith" by Graham McNeil; "The Lightning Tower" by Dan Abnett; "Raven's Flight" by Gav Thorpe (these stories were previously published; "Raven's Flight", a prequel to Book 18, is an adaptation of an original "Horus Heresy Audio Drama", the first such entry in this series). Novellas: "The Crimson Fist" by John French (prepublished as stand-alone e‑book, see French 2012); "The Prince of Crows", an original story by Aaron Dembski‑Bowden. (Dunn, Kyme & 2012-2, edition notice [p. 6 (not numbered)], § "Contents").
- Review: Fergus 2012 (positive).
- "The Reflection Crack'd" by Graham McNeil (Dunn & 2012-3, pp. 11–110), and "The Crimson Fist" by John French (Dunn, Kyme & 2012-2, pp. 11–123).
- Review: Bosier 2013 (positive).
- Review of the "Premium Hardback" edition: Sharps 2013 (positive).
- The subtitle Blood for the Blood God is also the title of an unrelated 2008 Warhammer Fantasy novel. See Blood for the blood god in libraries (WorldCat catalog). Retrieved February 26, 2013.
- "The Shards of Erebus" by Guy Haley; "Calth that Was" (novella) by Graham McNeill; "Dark Heart" by Anthony Reynolds; "The Traveller" by David Annandale; "A Deeper Darkness" by Rob Sanders; "The Underworld War" by Aaron Dembski‑Bowden; "Athame" by John French; and "Unmarked" by Dan Abnett (Goulding 2013, [track list, track intro]). "Dark Heart" was previously published in text, as an "e‑short" in January 2013 (Reynolds 2013).
- The Black Library Team 2013; Black Library Online & "Horus Heresy". Books 1–22 originally printed as mass-market (mm) paperbacks. For Book 23 and following, first general-availability print edition is in trade format with fold-out cover. See also Black Library Facebook Page 2012, [post by Black Library, 7 December 2012 at 4:56 am] . Retrieved January 4, 2012; imprints or editions of individual novels may have alternate subtitles[14][16] and may also have variations in punctuation or capitalization of title or subtitle; for examples of compilation stories that have been published individually see: Black Library Online & "Ebooks: Horus Heresy" (includes listing of short story e‑books). Kyme 2011a (downloadable "audio short"). Abnett et al. 2011 (audiobook bundle includes a short story extra on separate disc media); as of April 2013 the series as a whole was not assigned an official series or "set" ISBN, nor an ISSN. However unique ISBNs may be assigned to the publisher's bundle offers; publication details of series titles may not be presented uniformly across publisher communications, such as in the official series website (listed in § External links), and the Black Library webpages listed here; this article refers to UK releases and more generally to English-language editions, except where stated otherwise. For series titles published in other languages, see non-English editions in libraries (Worldcat catalog). Retrieved March 18, 2012.
- As of April 2013, all digital media editions, the books' art, and the majority of special editions and bundles were offered exclusively through the publisher's online or physical outlets (Black Library Online & FAQ); this included the "Horus Heresy Collections" (Black Library Online & "Horus Heresy Collections"), and the titles' "Premium Hardback Edition" (The Black Library Team 2012b; "premium" editions are offered at a substantially higher price compared to regular versions, see Black Library Online & "Horus Heresy" for price information); Todd 2013, ¶ 2. "[T]he traditional publishing model of 'hardback followed by paperback edition much later ....'"
- Mass-market paperback approx. 17 cm × 10 cm (6.7 in × 3.9 in); trade paperback approx. 23 cm × 15 cm (9.1 in × 5.9 in). Sources: Amazon UK; British National Bibliography; digital media size range reflects decompressed readable/listenable formats. "Enhanced e‑book" editions not included in the indicated values (such versions may be substantially larger). Range values are extrapolated approximations, see Black Library Online & FAQ, "What size are the files?"); for audio edition information, see individual title listings under Black Library Online & "Horus Heresy"
- As of Book 24 (originally published December 2012); for more information, see cited works under § References.
- Prepublication examples: French 2011. Short story from the Age of Darkness compilation which was simultaneously published (in text and audio) in Black Library's Hammer and Bolter e‑magazine; Thorpe 2012b. A novella republished in The Primarchs compilation. It was serialized in Hammer and Bolter from February to April 2012; French 2012. Novella from the Shadows of Treachery compilation prepublished as an e‑book in July 2012; The Black Library Team 2010. Information about a Games Workshop event, with prerelease versions of series titles on offer
- Book 23 "premium" editions: McNeill 2012b-1, (hardcover), 2012b-2, (e‑book). Book 1 republished in same: Abnett [2006] 2012b-1, (hardcover), [2010] 2012b-2, (e‑book)
- Review of Horus Rising "5th Anniversary Edition": Rhoads 2011b; and of the "Premium Hardback Edition": Scholes 2013. (Both positive).
- The Black Library Team 2011 (publisher webpage).
- Abnett & [2006] 2011c.
- Black Library Online & "Horus Heresy Audio Boxset"
- Abnett et al. 2011.
- Series authors 2011 [estimated total size approx. 14 megabytes]. Limited-time offer expired 2012, see ""The Black Library - Xmas Horus Heresy Complete Works"". Archived from the original on January 16, 2012. Retrieved December 31, 2012. [Archive of a snapshot of the same page by the Wayback Machine (beta version)]. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
- Critics' praise: Flory 2011, ¶ 2. "There have been a few little blips along the way ... but on the whole, the 'Horus Heresy' series has consistently demonstrated why it’s the flagship series for the Black Library" – and critics' complaint: Dean 2011, ¶ 1. "Here we go again, ... the [Horus Heresy] plot has been drawn out like over-stretched chewing gum"; Sobel 2010, ¶ 5. "Certain reviewers have criticised the glut of personalities ... and in some cases my experience has resonated with this critique"; Wolff 2011, ¶ 2. "[T]he Horus Heresy has had its ups ... and downs...."; Flory 2012, ¶ 7. "[The series] ... has already been proven to jump backwards and forwards along its own timeline and certain events ... have already been alluded to."
- Postulated creative constraints: Rhoads (2010, ¶ 1); Dean (2011, ¶ 4); fans vs. casual readers: Fortune (2012, ¶ 4); Rudden (2012, final paragraph).
- Locus Online 2006, 2013. [For listings of other series titles, search Locus Online's "Locus Bestsellers" category archives. Retrieved April 26, 2013.].
- Stone 2011b, § "Top 20 audiobooks fiction". Two related works from the Horus Heresy audio drama series Garro appeared in the same list: the Legion of One CD (Garro vol. 1) was in the top position; the CD for volume 2, Oath of Moment was at number 9.
- Stone 2008, p. S6. "The Bookseller classifies a small publisher as any ... [with] revenue ... [in the] last year of less than 0.3% [of the Total Consumer Market] ...."
- Bookseller 2008; Stone 2009, "Titles from Games Workshop's Black Library publishing arm always hover around or in The Bookseller's weekly small publishers charts, and three titles make the 2009 Top 20." [The titles referred to were all series Books]
- Gronli 2010a.
- Eureka 2011, "[Ranking by] [s]ales, January 2011 Source: Nielsen.com".
- Publishers Weekly 2012, § "Top 10 Science Fiction", p. 18
- At the New York Times Bestseller List (New York Times & "Best Sellers"):
• A Thousand Sons 14 March 2010 • Nemesis 15 August 2010 • The First Heretic 14 November 2010 21 November 2010 • Prospero Burns 16 January 2011 • Age of Darkness 15 May 2011 • Know No Fear 18 March 2012 • The Primarchs 17 June 2012 • Fear to Tread 16 September 2012 23 September 2012 - The audience has a partially omniscient point-of-view, since a number of significant events, the general outline, and the ending of the Horus Heresy are known in advance. Story elements have been published by Games Workshop starting 1988 (Merrett 2007, p. 6 [not numbered]) ; a comprehensive outline, including the conclusion, was published in the four-volume Horus Heresy art book series between May 2004 and July 2006. This series was republished in a 2007 omnibus edition, see Collected Visions (in § Related works: Selections).
- Rundle 2010, p. 2. Retrieved January 2, 2013. From an interview with series author Dan Abnett; Farley 2010. Interview with Neil Roberts, the series' main artist; Rhoads 2010, ¶ 1. From a reviewer's essay; for a creator's perspective on working within the overall Warhammer environment see Baxter (2003).
- Stone 2011a, "Special [mention] also go[es] to ... Black Library (thanks to the popularity of its Horus Heresy series) for growing [its] sales in a tough market."; Kirby et al. 2012, p. 3.
- Bickham 2012 (from a Games Workshop monthly publication).
- Merrett 2007 .
- Wraight 2011b.
- Dembski-Bowden 2011. Originally offered as a "Collectors Edition" web exclusive.
- Bligh 2012.
References
References may include multiple versions of cited works, published in alternate formats or media: these versions appear consecutively, are separated by a double semicolon (;;), and are listed by full date of release in ascending order (displayed date may be truncated); where applicable they are sub-listed by media type, in alphabetical order. In such references, information common to listed versions may appear in a single instance only.
Where "originally published" appears in entries for standalone or self-contained works (including compilations), it refers to the work's first release in the indicated media type.
Audio sources are listed by author(s).
- "A Tale of Heresy". thehorusheresy.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
- "A Thousand Sons by Graham McNeill". London, UK: Financial Times Group. Europe Intelligence Wire. February 6, 2010. OCLC 321332763.
- Abnett, Dan (2006). Horus rising: the seeds of heresy are sown (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 1. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-294-9;; (e-book). 2010a. ISBN 978-0-85787-021-6 Missing or empty
|title=
(help);; (audiobook). Read by Martyn Ellis; abridged by Christian Dunn (abridged ed.). 2011a. ISBN 978-1-84970-015-3. Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2008). Legion: secrets and lies (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 7. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-536-0;; (e‑book). 2010b. ISBN 978-0-85787-032-2. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - —— (2010c–1). Prospero burns: the wolves unleashed (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 15. Read by Gareth Armstrong (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-122-0 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑book). 2010c–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-125-1 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). 2011b. ISBN 978-1-84416-776-0. Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2011c) [originally published 2006]. Horus rising: the seeds of heresy are sown (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 1. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (5th anniversary ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-111-2.
- —— (2012a–1). Know no fear: the battle of Calth (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 19. Read by Gareth Armstrong (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-613-3 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑book). 2012a–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-512-9 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). 2012a–3. ISBN 978-1-84970-134-1. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2012b–1) [originally published 2006]. Horus rising: the seeds of heresy are sown (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 1. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts; illustrations by Karl Richardson ("Premium Hardback" ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-382-6 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑book) ("Enhanced" ed.). 2012b–2 [originally published 2010]. ISBN 978-0-85787-915-8. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - Abnett, Dan; Counter, Ben; McNeill, Graham (2011). The Horus Heresy audio boxset (audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 1–3. Read by Martyn Ellis; abridged by Christian Dunn; includes additional (unabridged) "audio short" extra written by Abnett (abridged bundled limited ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-218-8.
- Ahmed, Samira (March 12, 2012). "Why are adults still launching tabletop war?". Magazine. BBC News Online (online news resource) (world ed.). BBC Online. OCLC 50165437. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved November 6, 2012.
- Ansell, Bryan & Priestley, Rick (1990). Realm of chaos (print). The lost and the damned. Cover art by Les Edwards; illustrations by Games Workshop staff artists & designers; storytext by Games Workshop staff writers (1st ed.). Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. ISBN 978-1-869893-52-1.
- Antigonos [pseudonym]; et al. (October 18, 2011). "Temporal inconsistencies in Outcast Dead (?)- Dropsite Massacre and Prospero's Razing". warseer.com (online discussion site). Copiague, New York: Nicholas Lown. Forum: Warhammer 40,000 Background. [thread id] 321105. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012. Retrieved March 20, 2012. [Partial archive].
- "Authors". blacklibrary.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on December 28, 2010. Retrieved March 10, 2012.
- Baxter, Stephen (May–June 2003) [originally in print edition, issue 229; unspecified online pub. date]. "Freedom in An Owned World: Warhammer Fiction and the Interzone Generation". Vector (online ed.). British Science Fiction Association. ISSN 0505-0448. [Vector online article id] 42. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
- "Best Sellers [mass-market paperback]". Books. New York Times (online ed.). The New York Times Company. [weekly feature]. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 22, 2011. Check date values in:
|date=
(help) - "Bestsellers May 28 – June 3, 2012". Publishers Weekly. New York: PWxyz. 259 (24): 14–18. June 11, 2012. ISSN 0000-0019.
[I]nformation supplied by Nielsen Bookscan.
- Bickham, Jes, ed. (October 2012). "The Horus Heresy". [Feature article]. White Dwarf (UK print ed.). Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop (394). 82–89, insert. ISSN 0265-8712.
- Bligh, Alan (2012). Betrayal (print). Horus Heresy [rulebooks]. 1. Cover art, illustrations, & reproductions by Forge World staff artists & designers (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Forge World. ISBN 978-1-907964-96-1.
- Bosier, Jen (June 28, 2010). "Horus Heresy 101". Arts & Entertainment. Examiner.com (online news resource) (national ed.). Denver, Colorado: Clarity Media Group. OCLC 649509343.
- —— (April 22, 2013). "Iron Within: Angel Exterminatus Review". Technology. Forbes.com (online news resource). New York: Forbes. ISSN 0015-6914. Archived from the original on May 1, 2013. Retrieved May 1, 2013.
- Brent [Brent Aleman] (January 15, 2013). "Brent's Chump Fight: 30K vs 40K". Bell of Lost Souls. Comments by readers. Austin, Texas: BoLS Interactive. § "Editorials". Archived from the original on January 16, 2013. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
- "Coming Soon". blacklibrary.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Retrieved April 15, 2013.
- Counter, Ben (2006). Galaxy in flames: the heresy revealed (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 3. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-393-9;; (e‑book). 2010a. ISBN 978-0-85787-023-0 Missing or empty
|title=
(help);; (audiobook). Read by Martyn Ellis; abridged by Christian Dunn (abridged ed.). 2012. ISBN 978-1-84970-094-8. Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2008). Battle for the Abyss: my brother, my enemy (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 8. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-657-2;; (e‑book). 2010b. ISBN 978-0-85787-033-9. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - Dean, Steve (December 8, 2011). "The Outcast Dead by Graham McNeill. Audiobook review". britishfantasysociety.org. UK: British Fantasy Society. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 8, 2012.
- —— (July 2, 2012). "Warhammer 40K: The Primarchs: The Horus Heresy. Book review". britishfantasysociety.org. UK: British Fantasy Society. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved July 11, 2012.
- Dembski-Bowden, Aaron (January 2010). The first heretic: fall to chaos (e‑book). Horus Heresy [book series]. 14. Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-045-2;; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). February 2010. ISBN 978-1-84416-884-2. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - —— (2011). Aurelian: the eye stares back (print). Horus Heresy [novellas]. Cover art by Neil Roberts (Collectors Editions: Gold ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-106-8.
- —— (2012a). Void stalker (print). Night Lords. 3. Cover art by Jon Sullivan (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-148-8.
- —— (2012b). Betrayer: blood for the blood god (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 24. Cover art by Neil Roberts; read by Jonathan Keeble (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-642-3;; (print) (1st UK trade ed.). 2013 [2012]. ISBN 978-1-84970-388-8. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - Dunn, Christian, ed. (January 2011). Age of darkness (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 16. Contains short stories by series authors; read by Gareth Armstrong, Martyn Ellis & Jonathan Keeble. Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-154-1;; (e‑book). February 2011. ISBN 978-0-85787-153-4 Missing or empty
|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). March 2011. ISBN 978-1-84970-036-8. Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ——, ed. (January 2012). The primarchs (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 20. Includes novellas by Nick Kyme, Graham McNeill, Rob Sanders & Gav Thorpe; read by Gareth Armstrong, Sean Barrett, Jonathan Keeble & David Timpson (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-638-6;; (e‑book). February 2012. ISBN 978-0-85787-651-5 Missing or empty
|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). March 2012. ISBN 978-1-84970-207-2. Missing or empty|title=
(help) - Dunn, Christian & Kyme, Nick, eds. (January 2012). Shadows of treachery (e‑book). Horus Heresy [book series]. 22. Includes short stories by Dan Abnett, Graham McNeill & Gav Thorpe; novellas by Aaron Dembski-Bowden & John French. Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-828-1;; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). February 2012. ISBN 978-1-84970-346-8. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - "Ebooks: Horus Heresy". blacklibrary.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on January 2, 2012. Retrieved January 12, 2012.
- "FAQ: Digital products, eBooks and audio". blacklibrary.com. Games Workshop. Archived from the original on December 29, 2010. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
- Farley, Jordan (July 21, 2010). "Interview: Neil Roberts". Features. sfx.co.uk (online news resource). Bath, Somerset: Future Publishing. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved October 7, 2012.
- Fergus, Stefan (August 30, 2012). "'Shadows of Treachery' ed. by Christian Dunn & Nick Kyme (Black Library)". Civilian Reader (blog). UK: Self-published. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
- Flory, Graeme. "Graeme's Fantasy Book Review". graemesfantasybookreview.com (blog). London, UK: Self-published. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
- "Tales from the Black Library – 'The Horus Heresy'". April 13, 2007. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
- "'Age of Darkness' – Edited by Christian Dunn (Black Library)". April 28, 2011. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 8, 2012.
- "'Fear to Tread' – James Swallow (Black Library)". August 11, 2012. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
- Fortune, Ed (n.d.). "Audio Review: A Thousand Sons + Prospero Burns". Reviews. Starburst. Manchester, UK: Starburst Magazine. ISSN 0955-114X. Archived from the original on January 8, 2013. Retrieved January 8, 2013.
- —— (February 26, 2012). "Book Review: Know No Fear". Reviews. Starburst. Manchester, UK: Starburst Magazine. ISSN 0955-114X. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 8, 2012.
- French, John (May 2011) [also in Dunn 2011-1, 2011-2]. Dunn, Christian (ed.). Hammer and Bolter (e-magazine). Nottingham, UK: Black Library (7). ISBN 978-0-85787-993-6. Missing or empty
|title=
(help);|contribution=
ignored (help) - —— (2012) [also in Dunn, Kyme & 2012-1]. The crimson fist (e‑book). Horus Heresy [novellas]. Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-732-1.
- "Frequently Asked Questions". blacklibrary.com. Games Workshop. § "Our most common questions". Archived from the original on May 27, 2011. Retrieved April 7, 2012.
- Goulding, Laurie, ed. (2009). The imperial truth: tales from the great crusade (PDF) (e‑book). Includes short stories by fan fiction authors; compiled by ShroudFilm; selections suggested and introduction by Dan Abnett. Derbyshire, England: ShroudFilm. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 16, 2013. Retrieved February 16, 2013.
- ——, ed. (2013). Mark of Calth (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 25. Contains a novella by Graham McNeill, and short stories by other series authors; read by Gareth Armstrong, Jonathan Keeble & David Timpson. Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-643-0.
- Gronli, Jonathan (August 22, 2008). "Gamertell Review: The Horus Heresy: False Gods by Graham McNeill". Gamertell: Reviews. TechnologyTell (online magazine). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Technology Tell Network. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
- —— (November 20, 2008). "Horus Heresy novel series wrapup". Gamertell. TechnologyTell (online magazine). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Technology Tell Network. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
- —— (March 24, 2010). "A Thousand Sons makes New York Times Best Seller list". Gaming News. TechnologyTell (online magazine). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Technology Tell Network. Archived from the original on May 13, 2013. Retrieved May 13, 2013.
- —— (October 18, 2010). "Gamertell Review: The Horus Heresy: Nemesis by James Swallow". Gamertell. TechnologyTell (online magazine). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Technology Tell Network. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
- "Horus Heresy". blacklibrary.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on May 27, 2011. Retrieved January 26, 2012.
- "Horus Heresy". Television Tropes & Idioms (wiki). US: TV Tropes Foundation. Archived from the original on April 8, 2012. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- "Horus Heresy Articles". Blogcritics (online magazine). San Francisco, California: Technorati. ISSN 1936-0649. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved March 8, 2012.
- "Horus Heresy Collections". blacklibrary.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on November 16, 2012. Retrieved October 22, 2012.
- isilvra [pseudonym] (February 17, 2011) [[[Timestamping (computing)|timestamped]] "09:31 PM"]. (discussion originator) AekoldHelbrass [pseudonym] (ed.). "Horus Heresy timeline: Post #3". The Bolter and Chainsword (online discussion site). Author edit of 2011-02-18, 8:05 pm. Thornton Heath, UK: David Johnston. Forum: The Horus Heresy. [thread id] 222664. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved October 26, 2012.
- Johnson, Jervis (1988). Adeptus titanicus (print). [Epic rulebooks]. Cover art by John Blanche; illustrations & reproductions by Games Workshop staff artists & designers (1st ed.). Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. ISBN 1-869893-57-3 [may be obsolete]. [Product code] GW00261.
- Kirby, Tom; Wells, Mark; et al. (July 30, 2012). Annual report 2012 (PDF) (Audited financial statement). Annual And Half Year Reports. 2011–2012. Audited by PriceWaterhouseCoopers; Mark Smith, Senior Statutory Auditor. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop Group. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 14, 2013. Retrieved February 14, 2013.
- Kyme, Nick (2011a) [also in Dunn & 2011-1]. Forgotten sons (e‑audio short). Horus Heresy [short stories]. Read by Martyn Ellis. Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-191-6.
- —— (2011b). Promethean sun: into the fires of war (print). Horus Heresy [novellas]. Cover art by Neil Roberts (Collectors ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-122-8.
- Kyme, Nick & Priestley, Lindsey, eds. (2009). Tales of heresy (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 10. Features short stories by series authors; cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-683-1;; (e‑book). 2010. ISBN 978-0-85787-038-4. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - Lee, Mike (2009). Fallen angels: deceit and betrayal (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 11. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-728-9;; (e‑book). 2010. ISBN 978-0-85787-039-1. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - "Limited Edition Horus Heresy Audio Boxset". blacklibrary.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on October 2, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2012.
- "Locus Bestsellers". Locus Online. California, US: Locus Publications. §§ "Gaming-Related", [data collection notes]. ISSN 0047-4959. Retrieved April 26, 2013. [Charts lag data collection by 3 months].
- "August 2006". August 2006 [originally in issue 547; unspecified online pub. date]. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved October 28, 2012.
Data period: May 2006.
- "January [2013]". January 10, 2013 [originally in issue 624]. Archived from the original on April 26, 2013. Retrieved April 26, 2013.
Data period: October 2012.
- "August 2006". August 2006 [originally in issue 547; unspecified online pub. date]. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved October 28, 2012.
- Marcoos [pseudonym]; et al. (January 24, 2013). "Primarch Discovery Order". The First Expedition (online discussion site). Hyperion [pseudonym] et al.; InvisionFree. p. 2. "Forum: 30,000 Q&As". [thread id] 136. [Partial archive]. Missing or empty
|url=
(help) - Masshuu [pseudonym]; et al. (May 10, 2010). "Upcoming Horus Heresy Novels". Warhammer 40k Forums, Articles & Blogs (online discussion site). UK: 40K Forums. Forum: Warhammer 40k Background and Stories. [thread id] 22297. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved October 26, 2012. [Partial archive].
- McNeill, Graham (2006). False gods: the heresy takes root (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 2. Cover art & illustration by Philip Sibbering (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-370-0;; (e‑book). 2010a. ISBN 978-0-85787-022-3 Missing or empty
|title=
(help);; (audiobook). Read by Martyn Ellis; abridged by Christian Dunn (abridged ed.). 2011b–1. ISBN 978-1-84970-057-3 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (e‑audiobook). 2011b–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-114-5. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2007). Fulgrim: visions of treachery (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 5. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-476-9;; (e‑book). 2010b. ISBN 978-0-85787-028-5 Missing or empty
|title=
(help);; (e‑audiobook). Read by David Timpson (unabridged ed.). 2013b. Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2008). Mechanicum: war comes to Mars (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 9. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts; map by Adrian Wood (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-664-0;; (e‑book). 2010c. ISBN 978-0-85787-037-7. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - —— (2010d–1). A thousand sons: all is dust... (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 12. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-808-8 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑audiobook). Read by Martyn Ellis (unabridged ed.). 2010d–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-118-3 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (e‑book). 2010d–3. ISBN 978-0-85787-051-3. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2011c–1). The outcast dead: the truth lies within (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 17. Read by Jonathan Keeble (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-327-9 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑book). 2011c–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-326-2 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). 2011c–3. ISBN 978-1-84970-086-3 https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781849700870. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2012b–1). Angel exterminatus: flesh and iron (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 23. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts; illustrations by Karl Richardson (Premium Hardback ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-209-6 Check date values in:
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(help);; (e‑book) (Enhanced ed.). 2012b–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-911-0. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2012b–3). Angel exterminatus: flesh and iron (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 23. Read by David Timpson (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-639-3 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑book). 2013a–1 [[[#ref-cmnt|originally]] published 2012]. ISBN 978-0-85787-912-7 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art by Neil Roberts (1st UK trade ed.). 2013a–2 [[[#ref-cmnt|originally]] published 2012]. ISBN 978-1-84970-359-8. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - McNish, Cliff (May 19, 2011). "Cliff McNish's top 10 most frightening books for teenagers". Guardian.co.uk (online news resource) (US ed.). London: Guardian Media Group. § "6. Legion by Dan Abnett". OCLC 60623878. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2012.
- Merrett, Alan (2007). Kyme, Nick & Ralphs, Matt (eds.). Collected visions: iconic images of the imperium, betrayal and war (print). Horus Heresy [art book series]. 1–4. Cover art & illustrations by Games Workshop staff artists & designers; includes short stories by Graham McNeill; illustrations by Sabertooth Games staff artists (omnibus ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-424-0.
- NT [Neal Tringham] (May 27, 2012). "Interactive Narrative". In Clute, John & Nicholls, Peter (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (online encyclopedia). London: SF Gateway. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved July 10, 2012.
- Perrin [pseudonym]; et al. (November 16, 2011). "Best Horus Heresy cover-art ever, In my opinion". The Bolter and Chainsword (online discussion site). Thornton Heath, UK: David Johnston. Forum: The Horus Heresy. [thread id] 242061. Archived from the original on April 14, 2012. Retrieved April 13, 2012. [Partial archive].
- Porush, David (November 1991) [originally in print edition; unspecified online pub. date]. "Prigogine, Chaos, and Contemporary Science Fiction". Science Fiction Studies (online ed.). Greencastle, Indiana: SF-TH. 18 (55). Part 3. ISSN 0091-7729. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved July 10, 2012.
- "[Preamble:] The Horus Heresy – It is a time of legend"; "§ Dramatis Personae". Horus Rising. Horus Heresy (audio; digital; print). [Book series]. 1–9, 11–15, 17–24. Various authors & contributors (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. 2006–2013. matter; liner notes. ISBN 978-1-84416-294-9. [Book 1 (Abnett 2006)].CS1 maint: others (link)
- Reid, Calvin (June 28, 2004). "BL Publishing Debuts Imprint". Publishers Weekly. New York: PWxyz. 251 (26): 14. ISSN 0000-0019.
- Reynolds, Anthony (2012). Word bearers omnibus (print). Word Bearers. Cover art by Clint Langley (omnibus ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-104-4.
- —— (2013). Dark heart (e‑book short). Horus Heresy [short stories]. Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-78251-013-0.
- Rhoads, Eric. "WordTipping: Fantasy and Science Fiction book reviews and opinions - Spoilers". wordtipping.com (blog). Meadville, Pennsylvania: Self-published. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
- "The Horus Heresy - Black Library's Challenge". December 5, 2010. Archived from the original on January 4, 2012. Retrieved October 21, 2012. [Archived copy included in multipage archive].
- "Horus Heresy: The Difficulty of Reviewing this series". March 2, 2011. Archived from the original on September 26, 2011. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- "Horus Rising by Dan Abnett". April 18, 2011. Archived from the original on November 13, 2011. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
- "Flight of the Eisenstein by James Swallow". July 23, 2012. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
- Roberts, Neil; et al. (2006–2013). Horus Heresy (CD; downloadable media; print). [Book series]. Various authors (all ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-294-9. [Book 1 (Abnett 2006)].
- Royle, Jo; Cooper, Lousis; Stockdale, Rosemary (December 1999). "The use of branding by trade publishers". Publishing Research Quarterly. New York: Springer Science+Business Media. 15 (4): 3–13. doi:10.1007/s12109-999-0031-1. ISSN 1053-8801.
- Rudden, David (July 16, 2012). "Horus Heresy: The First Heretic by Aaron Dembski-Bowden. Book review". britishfantasysociety.org. UK: British Fantasy Society. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved September 13, 2012.
- Rundle, James (February 18, 2010). "Interview: Dan Abnett". Books. SciFiNow (online ed.). Bournemouth, UK: Imagine Publishing. ISSN 1753-3147. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved January 2, 2013. Additional pages archived on January 2, 2013: Page 2.
- Sanders, Rob (February 2011) [also in Dunn & 2011-2]. Dunn, Christian (ed.). Hammer and Bolter (e-magazine). Nottingham, UK: Black Library (5). ISBN 978-0-85787-995-0. Missing or empty
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ignored (help) - Scanlon, Mitchel (2007). Descent of angels: loyalty and honour (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 6. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-508-7;; (e‑book). 2010. ISBN 978-0-85787-029-2. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - [Series authors] (2011). The Horus Heresy ebundle (e‑book). Horus Heresy [book series]. 1–17 (Xmas 2011 eBundle ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-497-9.
- Scholes, Sandra (March 6, 2013). "Horus Rising by Dan Abnett. Book review". britishfantasysociety.org. UK: British Fantasy Society. Archived from the original on March 12, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
- Sharps, Nick (August 9, 2012). "Book Review: Fear to Tread by James Swallow". SF Signal (webzine). Vancouver, Washington: SFSignal.com. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved August 31, 2012.
- —— (January 7, 2013). "Book Review: Betrayer by Aaron Dembski-Bowden". SF Signal (webzine). Vancouver, Washington: SFSignal.com. Archived from the original on March 19, 2013. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
- Sobel, Phillip (March 2010). "A Thousand Sons by Graham McNeill – review". Boomtron (webzine). Buford, Georgia: David Comery. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
- Stableford, Brian (2006). "Chaos". Science fact and science fiction: an encyclopedia (print) (1st ed.). London & New York. pp. 79–80. ISBN 978-0-415-97460-8. Retrieved April 23, 2013. [Online access subject to Google Books-imposed limits].
- Stone, Philip (September 26, 2008). "Packing a punch". Independent Publishers [special section]. Bookseller. London: Bookseller Media (5351): S6–S7. ISSN 0006-7539.
- —— (September 25, 2009). "Small but strong". Independent Publishers [special section]. Bookseller. London: Bookseller Media (5401): S6–S7. ISSN 0006-7539.
- —— (May 13, 2011). "Mixed business". Bookseller. London: Bookseller Media (5480): 24. ISSN 0006-7539.
- —— (September 16, 2011). "Listening post". Bookseller. London: Bookseller Media (5496): 28–29. ISSN 0006-7539.
- Swallow, James (2007). The flight of the Eisenstein: the heresy unfolds (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 4. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-459-2;; (e‑book). 2010a. ISBN 978-0-85787-026-1 Missing or empty
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(help);; (e‑audiobook). Read by Jonathan Keeble (unabridged ed.). 2012b. ISBN 978-0-85787-962-2. Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2010b–1). Nemesis: war within the shadows (print). Horus Heresy [book series]. 13. Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84416-868-2 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑book). 2010b–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-052-0. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (2012a–1). Fear to tread: the angel falls (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 21. Read by Gareth Armstrong (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-0-85787-803-8 Check date values in:
|year=
(help);; (e‑book). 2012a–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-772-7 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). 2012a–3. ISBN 978-1-84970-195-2. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - "The Audiobook Shelf". Internet Bookwatch (Mailing list) (webzine ed.). Oregon, Wisconsin: Midwest Book Review. February 2012. Archived from the original on February 24, 2013. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
- The Black Library Team [staff writers]. "The Black Library Blog". blacklibrary.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on October 17, 2012. Retrieved October 18, 2012.
- "Black Library at Games Day - Update". September 14, 2010. Archived from the original on March 19, 2012. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
- "The seeds of heresy are being re-sown". March 3, 2011. Archived from the original on March 19, 2012. Retrieved October 18, 2012.
- "Hell's Angels". April 19, 2012. Archived from the original on April 22, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2012.
- "Hard Back Heresy". September 22, 2012. Archived from the original on October 31, 2012. Retrieved September 23, 2012.
- "What one's right for me?". March 12, 2013. Archived from the original on April 30, 2013. Retrieved April 30, 2013. [Archived copy may not be fully legible, and is provided as proof of concept only].
- "The Characters of the Horus Heresy". thehorusheresy.com. Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
- Thorpe, Gav (2012a–1). Deliverance lost: ghosts of Terra (e‑audiobook). Horus Heresy [book series]. 18. Read by Gareth Armstrong (unabridged ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. Check date values in:
|year=
(help) ISBN provided by the publisher (978-0-87578-759-11) is invalid.;; (e‑book). 2012a–2. ISBN 978-0-85787-985-1 Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help);; (print). Cover art & illustration by Neil Roberts (1st UK ed.). 2012a–3. ISBN 978-1-84970-061-0. Check date values in:|year=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - —— (February–April 2012) [also in Dunn & 2012-2]. Dunn, Christian (ed.). Hammer and Bolter (e-magazine). Nottingham, UK: Black Library (17–19). ISBN 978-0-85787-983-7[Serial; ISBN is for issue 17]. Missing or empty
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ignored (help) - Todd, Jenny (March 1, 2013). "Format's theorum [sic]". Bookseller. London: Bookseller Media (5565): 13. ISSN 0006-7539.
- "Top 10 sci-fi & fantasy books for adults". Eureka. London: The Times (18): 54. March 3, 2011 [monthly magazine supplement of The Times]. ISSN 0140-0460.
- "Top 20 Fiction Heatseekers". Bookseller. London: Bookseller Media (5361): 34. December 5, 2008. ISSN 0006-7539.
- Troke, Adam; Vetock, Jeremy & Ward, Mat (2012). Warhammer 40,000 (print). Warhammer 40,000 rulebooks. Cover art by Alex Boyd; illustrations & reproductions by Games Workshop staff artists & designers; storytext by Alan Merret (6th ed.). Nottingham, UK: Games Workshop. ISBN 978-1-907964-79-4.
- Wolff, Karl (September 6, 2009). "Book Review: Descent of Angels (The Horus Heresy, Book 6) by Mitchel Scanlon". Blogcritics (online magazine). San Francisco, California: Technorati. ISSN 1936-0649. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 9, 2012.[Partial archive].
- —— (April 26, 2011). "Book Review: Mechanicum (The Horus Heresy, Book Nine) by Graham McNeill". Lifestyle: Blogcritics. Seattle Post-Intelligencer (online newspaper). Hearst Seattle Media. ISSN 0745-970X. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved March 8, 2012.
- Wraight, Chris (2011b). Battle of the fang (print). Space Marine Battles Novels. Cover art by Jon Sullivan; illustrations by John Blanche; maps by Adrian Wood & Chris Wraight (1st UK ed.). Nottingham, UK: Black Library. ISBN 978-1-84970-046-7.