Ratings20
Average rating4.4
A Great War is coming, and it will engulf the Imperium of Man. The Space Marines of the Alpha Legion, the last and most secretive of all the Legiones Astartes brotherhoods, arrive on a heathen world to support the Imperial Army in a pacification campaign against strange and uncanny forces. But what drives the Alpha Legion? Can they be trusted, and what side will they choose when the Great War begins? Loyalties are put to the test, and the cunning schemes of an alien intelligence revealed.
Series
793 released booksWarhammer 40,000 is a 793-book series with 793 released primary works first released in 1949 with contributions by Ian Watson, Storm Constantine, and William King.
Featured Series
53 primary books68 released booksThe Horus Heresy is a 68-book series with 68 released primary works first released in 2004 with contributions by Dan Abnett, Graham McNeill, and Ben Counter.
Series
14 primary booksDer große Bruderkrieg is a 14-book series with 14 released primary works first released in 2006 with contributions by Dan Abnett, Graham McNeill, and Ben Counter.
Series
43 primary books52 released booksThe Horus Heresy - Black Library recommended reading order is a 52-book series with 43 released primary works first released in 2006 with contributions by Dan Abnett, Graham McNeill, and Ben Counter.
Reviews with the most likes.
Within the sprawling Horus Heresy series, certain generalizations have been made. Chief among them: Dan Abnett is one of the Black Library’s finest storytellers. Legion is a testament to that reputation.
Unlike its predecessors, Legion departs from the grand theater of war lead by the Astartes to deliver something far more intricate—a taut, cerebral spy thriller teeming with subterfuge, shifting allegiances, and shadowy manipulations. In many ways, it is the perfect introduction to the Alpha Legion, the most enigmatic of the Emperor’s Space Marines.
Abnett’s prose is razor-sharp, his pacing relentless. The novel's ensemble cast crackles with wit and depth, each player thrust into a labyrinth of deception where every move is a gamble. It is a narrative of secrets within secrets, where nothing is as it seems—a fitting mirror to the Legion it portrays.
For those seeking the Horus Heresy's central storyline, Legion may feel like a diversion; it does not directly propel the core arc forward. Yet to bypass it would be to miss one of the series' most compelling and thought-provoking installments. This is Abnett at his finest—gripping, intelligent, and impossible to put down.