Patrick Stuart's Blog, page 17

November 29, 2021

Eclipse Knights - the Prescience Wars

 "In the absence of god the promise of the future itself becomes god."
Men read often, in those black times, dreams and visions, spectres in dark glass, angels in moonlight and the turning of cards. Visions of the future, maps of Time.
The future is the greatest wyrm and guards the greatest horde. What do you desire, what can you imagine to want, that does not ultimately lie there, wrapped in the coils of time? sliding over scales of moments, slipping, tumbling, flashing amid the darkness, both real and dreamed, but possible?
From the wisest to the worst, all dreamed and spun, turned cards and gutted beasts, tricked rhymes from witches and blinded snakes to watch the letters in their maddened coils, and the best were worst, for the dreams of criminals and peasants are simple to see and brutal to find - gold, safety and sex, position and petty power. A dukedom even, or the coding of a simple spell.
Singular, material dreams, easily found and fulfilled, moments in the maze of time.
And just as easily slipping away once found. The swineherd becomes a duke, and is deposed, the bandit becomes rich, and is quickly robbed and killed by those they once called friend. A marriage bound upon the prick of a fairy pin, dissolves, disappears before the leaves turn. Like waves of circumstance collapsing on the shore, making room for other prophecies, for other dreams, all while the many jibe and barter, scurrying in dross for a sniff of better times.
So much for empty souls, the hungry ghosts who make up the marrow of the world, simple minds, even en-masse, bound in littleness of harm.
Watching this, not the incidents, but the whole, the substance of society and time, churning and bubbling as shards and spumes of prophesied causality burst through both like sea-wrack smashed by waves against the shore, were greater minds, deeper men with finer and sharper and better ideals.
They did not hunger for power, not consciously, and not for material things. Not golds or crowns or flesh or land.
They wanted to change Time itself, to change mortalities relationship to time.
To what exactly, each differed, there was little consensus.
But not this.
Not this degrading and harrying and questing after trinkets and baubles of fate. Not this unstable dream-wracked world, turning always on a story, or the spin of a wheel, this land where the only currency was promises of possibility and the only sane work was to mine and harvest, harrow the land and batter down each soothsayers door in search of futures, or else to be a soothsayer, or a witch, false or real it mattered as much as the bite of two envenomed snakes. Trading and dealing and tripping over dreams dreams dreams, trade a dream of your dinner for food for the day, and dream harder that night for more dreams to sell.
So then thought the wisest of women and the greatest of men in those forgotten times, and though they agreed on very little, one thing they all held clear.
Not this.
Yet, where can a better world be found, except in that same future they abjured? And if a man might turn on family, sell his home for magic beans, or a housewife leave her babies in the brook, a child light the thatch on a winters night, all for the promise of a better fate, be it ever so small, some treasure, a lover, water in the well..
Then what might these potentates, Sorcerers, Philosophers, Emperors and Priests, what might they do, not for their own benefit, not for their own power, but for the world, nay, for reality itself? What crime was unforgivable if the alternative was this?
What is necessary can be no crime. Would you hang the mother who steals bread for her children? And what might not become necessary in time, when the harrowing of time became the aim? 
To break the axle of a sinful world, some sins must be committed, and if they must be done, they are no sin. 
The promise of the future forgives all.
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Published on November 29, 2021 08:26

November 19, 2021

Warhammer is a Satire Now

 If you are a dorky, low status white man, at some point in your life you look around to see that you are surrounded by other, dorky, low status (probably fat), white men. 
And you either say to yourself; "Well, here we are then." Or something else happens inside you and you cringe because you being here, in this place, with these people, is a sign of moral failing.

.....................

So Warhammer is officially a Satire now. No longer just a midwit take on r/40klore, 'tis the gospel truth as proclaimed from the Warhammer Community Itself.
The provocation in this case is a situation in Spain where someone wearing outright Fascist gear entered a tournament and the organisers refused to eject him. Warhammer Community don't dare to name the Tournament, the circumstances or the individual. Instead they take refuge in this... 
It would be too far to call it a lie, especially an intentional one. Its more like a feverishly-held half-truth, directly said, in the companies voice; "Warhammer is a Satire", which it largely is not.
40k doesn't have a singular message. Its a a paracosm, not a story, and any game, project, book, animation, paint job or whatever can have any one of a billion different interpretations depending on who is playing and how.
Secondly, hypermasculine ultra dark Nietzschean gothic tragedy has been a core component of 40k from the very start. Not the only component. Yes there was stuff like Obiwan Sherlock Clouseaau and lots of silly stuff, but even in the Rogue Trader, mixed in with it, there is a lot of extremely powerful, dark, emotive stuff which while it is sad and doomed is very definitely and very obviously NOT SATIRICAL, at least not in any way that a normal person uses the term.
And all of this is and has been largely fine. 99.9999999 per cent of people playing and interacting in the "ccuuuhhhmunityyyy"  have managed to access these dork, powerful and complex emotions on their own terms and have not actually become Fascist.
Access to dark and powerful emotions is important. Especially if you actually have  adult emotions and not just "positions". 
How will an alienated teenage boy, a nerdy guy in his 20s, and a lumbering middle aged man, the same person, but separated by time, respond to 40k? It will be different each time, and that relationship, that synthesis and push and pull between these quite deep dark and powerful emotions, will shift and alter in a PROCESS OF FUCKING GROWTH. A process of growth and change which can only really happen if they are allowed to relate to the subject in a free way, now serious, now ridiculous, now detailed, now vague, now deeply involved, now from a distance, literally taking on the point of view of one side then another.
A process that cannot now take place because "Warhammer is a Satire". There is one approved and intended moral axis and intended moral resolution to EVERYTHING that happens in the imaginary 41st Millennium.
That this is a delusion is utterly evident by almost every game of Warhammer, in which people occupy and embody varied and changing assumed points of view from moment to moment, and that's even taking into account GWs new, foolishly extended and non representative version of what "satire" means. Its word games pursued to escape the dark and dangerous business of dealing with the paradox at the core of the imagined world.
Its a vague, and ultimately destructive, because false and deceptive, statement of "values" which carefully avoids mentioning the exact circumstances of even the particular incident that triggered it because to do so would be to take a legal and social risk. The kind of risk you would think anti-fascists would be eager to leap into.
It doesn't get you off the hook you fucking cowards, you fools, it puts you deeper in.
So now you are going to be sitting in a room with Disney, or Amazon or Henry Cavils agents, and talking about how the Hero of this series isn't really actually a hero, I mean yes they are the main vector of action, do all the main things, are the most powerful and dynamic person and the main subject of identification with the largely male audience, but they aren't like a "hero" hero. Because Warhammer is a satire. And no this particular story isn't funny no, but actually we meant satire on a technical sense, look see this definition here. An yes the enemy are literal rape demons and the Empire in this series is bad but better than rape demons, but its still a satire you see...
Oh and get this;
WE CAN'T PROVE THAT ANYTHING THE EMPEROR EVER DID WAS WRONG
Firstly because he's FUCKING IMAGINARY.
Secondly its an entire cosmos specifically created to make horrific structures and actions taken to resist it seem reasonable. A reality where if you think about the wrong magic symbol too hard a rape demon comes out of you.
"Something doesn’t have to be wacky or laugh-out-loud funny to be satire. The derision is in the setting’s amplification of a tyrannical, genocidal regime, turned up to 11."
Of course, the cosmos you are talking about is one specifically created to make that tyrannical genocide potentially necessary.
The Fascists dream of infinite corruptive enemies, insidious perverting ideologies, a nightmarish other which desires nothing but your annihilation and the necessity of a cult of heroic sacrifice is actually verifiably true in the imaginary 41s Millennium.
"Hey guys, I wrote an extended multi-book, multi-medium fanfiction about World War Two in which the Jews really do have psychic powers and really are running an illuminati SUPER CONSPIRACY to dominate the world! Its a satire."
The cults are real. The demon gods are real. Most of the Aliens do genuinely want to destroy you. The society itself is monstrous and corrupt, but we can't really call it evil since it has better, actual reasons for being so than any human society that has ever existed in the real world.
So how is it a satire when the Empire genocides a planet? Or does any one of a thousand other things to stop the, in this reality, actual and real existential threat?
It might be a tragedy. It isn't a satire. And now you will have to sit in a room with neat little men wearing suits and explain half-truths and lies to get advertising money.
"An examination of a dark reality?" nope
"A tragic investigation of how much of humanity survives when the only way to survive is to gradually slice off more and more humanity?" Nope not that.
"A shameless explosive aesthetic deep dive into the staggering emotional and visceral charge of gothic art and doomed male hypermasculine identification taken to the n'th degree but its ok because art is made up and maybe somehow this will be useful to humanity in ways we can't easily put in a spreadsheet, or maybe its not even useful in any way but fuck it lets d Human Expression in art because do do so is to embody Humanity?"
No not that either.
Instead; "Warhammer is a Satire". 
Lies lies lies. Convenient midwit bullshit that gets you out of the moral jam of defending the very thing that gives you all jobs to an unsympathetic audience you SO DESPERATELY wish looked at you with respect.
"Isn't Eisenhorn the hero here?"
"Well yes but then he GOES TOO FAR"
"But then isn't Ravenor the hero?"
"Yes but"
"And how many people has he tortured and murdered?"
"Oh lots, but offscreen. And then Bequin is the Hero! Female representation! Diversity!"
"And does she torture and murder?"
"Well to start she works for a eugenicist crime cult.."
"I see.."
"But then she gets pulled into the orbit of a guy who hangs out with a fucking demon."
"And this is a satire how?"
"Oh its bad. Its all very very bad yes. (But very enjoyable if you watch it on Amazon Prime, really great entertainment)"
"And its ok to identify with the agents of this theocratic genocidal fascist state for entertainment because its satire?"
"Yes yes, Fascism bad! We put a little message at the front!"

......................

It wouldn't be anywhere near as bad, it wouldn't be bad at all, if they had just said; "Actual Fascists Not Welcome" instead of linking it to this stupid, fucking double-digit IQ take. The two points now tied irrevocably together.
Stupidity? Liberal midwitsism? Or actual deliberate falsity in which a foolish piece of nice-sounding ideology is hidden beneath the soft cloth of "Racists Bad", so that now anyone who sees the strange stinking lump beneath that cloth...?
"What do you have under there Games Workshop? It stinks to high heaven."
"Oh but Racists Bad."
"Yes that is written on the silken cloth which you use to cover what looks and smells like a lump of shit,  but what is beneath.."
"RACISTS BAD! RACISTS BAD! RACISTS BAAAAAAD! EVERYONE SHOULD BE FUCKING NICE OK???? WARHAMMER IS FOR EVERYONE!!!!!!!"

......................

Well, its an indefensible position and gets worse the more seriously you take it, but since its telling a society exactly what it wants to hear very possibly it will work, and anyway, Racists Bad hmmm? Who would disagree except autistic low-status men who get pissed off about whether anything you are saying makes actual sense. And do we really need those People? All they had to do was agree after all? And why wouldn't they? Doesn't is all look.. a bit suspicious? Kind of a bad look? I mean read the room right? Maybe its time for the moral prophylactic of a reblogged Randall Munroe comic...
I have a lot of intuitions about this, the people involved, what it means for culture and my place in that culture. Either you can probably guess what most of them are, and if not explaining them would be fruitless.
A healthier response would be to leave and re-focus on something I can actually change.
I will *try* to take one of my intermittent breaks from Warhammer and see *this time* how long I can stay off the Plastic Crack.
I will see if I can replace the energy dump with working on my own stuff, maybe going back into Eclipse Knights and doing everything I can to keep it very much NOT a satire.
Maybe actually learning to draw! We will see.....
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Published on November 19, 2021 10:42

November 9, 2021

What Pops an NPC?

 I am putting together some NPCs for a thing and am having the usual problems: limited space, lots of information to deliver etc, etc.
So I come to you, the sacred few, and subtly, silently, sneakily, I hook up my brain-hose to your skulls.

When you read an NPC - what is it that makes them POP off the page, and you think "Yes I can run this, I know immediately how to do it"?


A few axis of investigation;
- Looks, vividness/simplicity of description.
- How many signifiers is too many?
- Behavioural quirks; too heavy, too loose and vague?
- What's useful for imagining them, for helping players imagine and remember them, and for portraying them, which might be a slightly different axis.
- Motivations, the want/don't want lines. How simple do we want their wants to be?  Like specific objects = like "a pie", personal qualities like "to be complimented", very general social motivators like "high position, dominance"? and how quickly do we want these wants and don't wants to be integrated into play?
It depends a lot, doesn't it, on how long we expect that NPC to stick around.
Right now I'm trying to put together a kind of 'night market', or something like a fey market
with lots and lots of potential contacts to create a sense of overflowing possibilities but also many possible sources of information about a complex world to which the PCs are being introduced. But at the same time, I don't have a lot of space to hang about and probably few to none of these people will be sticking around later.
Many should be possible sources of information but I don't want them to be like vending machines, where they give "as you know your father, the king" speeches, neither do I want them to be too hard to deal with, as I want the PCs to be able to soak up a lot of info about the setting, and for people to feel particular, yet not to have any heavy drama this early on.
Its a lot of demands on the idea and then when I come to it I will probably end up just eyeballing it. 
NEVERTHELESS.
I am interested in what worked for you, books and adventures you thought were good, blog posts you thought were good, personal experiences etc.





PICTURE!


Got nothing to do with this post, pretty great though!
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Published on November 09, 2021 12:11

November 2, 2021

Make It Feel Big

 A response to this comment on a previous post;

semiurge28 October 2021 at 19:40

This is more a comment/response to all your Trailing Corposant posts than this one in particular: 

What do you think is required to make a fictional universe, fantasy or sci-fi or something of both or neither, feel big? 

I remember when I read the Dune series (Frank Herbert og, no Brian) I was weirdly disappointed on some level to learn that Paul's jihad had conquered hundreds or thousands or however many worlds, rather than the 50 or so I had assumed were settled by humanity when I read the original Dune. It simply didn't feel like it "earned" that scale, or had aimed for it, or something of that like. 

I don't have enough exposure to 40k stuff to make a real judgement call either way, having never played the game or read the novels. It seems from your reviews that there's a divide between the galactic-scale events which involve the same few primarchs, gods, emperors, etc., and the planetary-scale, humanizing stories, each with a unique cast. Is it almost ecosystemal, with a few apex predators and innumerable minnows in tiny ponds? Don't know how to end this question. Thoughts?

 

………………………… 

 

Put simply - you can't, if you want it to remain sensible and easily comprehensible to the people you intend to sell it to. BUT THERE IS MORE TO SAY AND I WILL SAY IT! 

 

 

The Needs of a Story 

The world itself is one thing and the means by which that world is known quite another. 

Most popular large-scale fantastic paracosm are developed for, and known through, stories. (Will look more at Games in the second part*). With a story told for a popular audience; how much time/cognitive dwell hours do you have? How many channels of information do you have? 

Frank Herberts original ‘Dune’ book had a shitload of story-pages plus appendices where he got to discuss the world in a pseudo-historical high-information style familiar to most RPG nerds. Denis Villeneuve has two and a bit hours of attention but many more channels via which to impart information (sound, visuals, the tonality of IRL performances, costumes etc). 

Later, and this comes in as we discuss Games more, there are things like Lexicanium, Wikis, massive online combined effort sources, Youtube videos and so on, but in most cases these come after the initial strike, the first and usually strongest effort that embeds the fiction in the minds of a sufficiently large or dedicated audience that following up on details actually makes sense. 

So, the story is not the world but at least in this first discussion, stories are the medium through which the world is known 

 

Families and Familiarity

What drives mass storytelling is overwhelmingly characters and families. I mean often “families” in a kind of technical, or more vague sense in that – not just a group of people connected with each other by blood (though that’s always handy), but a reasonably tight and consistent group of main characters who have close and sustained relationships with each other. 

How many “families” can you have in a single story? Dune has two primary families, who in this case are literal families, and you can expand and break that down depending on how deep you want to go; Corrino, the Fremen, the Bene Gesserit etc. 

Game of Thrones has, well at its core, two main families again, the Starks and the Baratheon/Lannisters, (with Danerys you could maybe say three), and again there are a shitload of other families who come in and out of more or less importance according to the episode. 

Star Trek has the family of the core crew and every story will be related to at least one of them, though the range of possible interactions is huge, albeit, with many repeating cultures and structures. 

Point being; there is a budget for how many groups, how many signs, symbols, hierarchies, behavioural elements, unusual motivations etc, you can get in and this budget is as part of an invisible tacit negotiation between the creators and the audience, a negotiation over attention and desire. 

Our real world has no such limit on the diversity of groups and cultures it can present in total. In a point that will likely come up again and again in this post, there is more strangeness and diversity on our planet right now than in most imagined galactic communities. 

 

 

 

Scenes and Structures 

No space in a story is real and no scale in a story is real. A difference made pleasingly tangible to normal people by comparing opening Game of Thrones to end of series Game of Thrones. 

Even without inventing a whole new scale of action (i.e. just doing stories about people on a normal sized planet with known technology), a huge amount of the illusion of scale is created in the WAY in which the story is told, ranging from the smallest possible thing to the deepest structure of the plot. 

Laurence of Arabia - a big long film about big empty spaces. Why does it feel big? and why does it feel bigger if seen in the cinema? One of the many many reasons which come to mind; 

The way the camera is set and the desert captured; (the famous super long scene in which a guy just gets closer and closer in the distance and the camera doesn't look away except now and then at characters who in turn peeeeer into that same distance trying to make out this slowly approaching shadow), this is a long long shot (relative to the cinematic norms and the rest of the film which reasserted those norms). That means if feels long, though in comparison to waiting for a bus in real life, it wasn't. A long shot in a long film full of long shots. 

Wear and tear, emotional distress, logistics, permanence of emotional separation, ease or difficulty of communication, the face of friends when greeting someone who has been a long way away and the response of the group as compared to someone who has been to the shops, the Great Return scene, or the Great Setting Off scene. The they-are-knackered-but-the-challenge-just-increased scene (oh shit we have to go through Moria?? We’ve already been walking the whole film!). 

Fuck it, the Indiana Jones lines on a map scene. WE ARE LITERALLY LOOKING AT A MAP! 

In plays or films, maybe even books, - the point at which a main or expected character enters the scene; 

"hey Shakespearian character- has that message from/for the King arrived?" 

"No I am looking at some offscreen ships and whatever right now and no horsemen have apparated" 

"Ok lets have a comedy interlude" 

half way through, lord grimtides enters - "Forsooth that was a long fucking way from the previous scene guys" 

shocked bit-players - "My lord tis the middle of the night or a party is on or whatever, clearly your arrival is a disruption to the social milieux" 

……………………………………….. 

Indiana  Jones - "Marcus I need to go and find the Lost Ark" 

Marcus - "Do you need to be literally fucking packing for the journey as you are talking to me? It’s the 1930s 5 minutes won’t cost you much." 

Indiana - "Marcus it might be the 1930s but this film is only two hours long and the next scene is in Tibet! I need to signal distance using immediately tangible and available behaviours and actions or they will realise that Tibet is a sound stage about 30ft away from here!" 

I think I've probably only just scratched the surface. 

 

Relativity in Space Travel – the Imagined Galaxy 

For some reason it seems reasonable for use to imagine GalacticTravel via Faster Than Light engines, but less so multi-galactic travel. It makes intuitive sense according to our sense of what scale is; yes you could link a nation with one technology, and need another to link a continent, or a planet. You could have an Agean Empire with gallies or whatever, and if you develop different ships, an Atlantic or global empire. 

But if you have broken the speed of light, so far as we know, you have already broken a universal constant so surely many galaxies to visit makes as much sense as one? 

But maybe that would be a scale too large for us to easily encompass even as a work of imagination. Like Shakespeare could say; “Hey, there’s this distant, magical island, like the ones you have read about in shipwreck reports”, and the audience might say ok a bit whacky but we will see where it goes. But it Shakespeare had said; “There’s this whole other PLANET” (an idea which, conceptually at least, is as within his abilities as out own), the audience would just have gone what the actual fuck I don’t understand. 

Likewise, we live in an age where we think we can reasonably imagine galactic polities, or polities in galaxies other than our own, but multi-galactic polities seem a bit silly or strange to us. 

Anyway, back to the main point of this section which is that there is no mass popular sci fi setting that I can think of where the way relativity effects storytelling, and in which the conjunctions of multiple characters and different cultures accelerating away from and then towards each other and meeting and interacting across different personal time scales is accounted for. 

You can lampshade it; “as you know this complex thing where time gets weird was addressed by the doop de doop box”, or isolate the crew from a larger culture; (are the crew in the ‘Alien’ films returning to anyone they know?), or just go wo  wooo its warp shenanigans, but to fully integrate it would disrupt the way the story is told so much that it would be a real challenge to get across to a normative audience. 

(Of this generation- there is a slow creeping deepening of sci-fi knowledge in the general audience across generations - look back at old 60s sci fi and see them explain what seem to us pretty basic concepts. There are probably very few normies in the west today who would need the concept of a 'parallel world' explaining to them for instance. So it’s more than possible that one day relativistic storytelling to a mass audience might become possible) 

 

 

 

The Scale Of Time - The Impossibility Of Presenting It So 

Time is more powerful than we are aware of from our histories or our stories. 

Time destroys but stories require that it not do so, or at least not so much. 

I don't know if I am smart enough or well read enough to fully go into this or argue the point but our understanding of History s being broadly coherent, making moral sense according to our values, even "telling a story", and of hanging together as something of a structure, is largely wrong. 

The coherence of history is a semi-illusion created by our obsessive re-investigation and tale telling about those few things we have somedata on. In a sense our histories are half-lies, or at least, tacit deceptions, because they are made up only of the fragments of knowledge that have not yet been destroyed by time. 

We have no real way to conceptualise the vast amount of "lost history" there is, all the events which happened to humans we don't know about, and we find it hard to fully describe the intense partiality of history, its fractured and particulate nature, we need it to be a "fabric" to understand it, for moral and perhaps simple cognitive reasons, and it isn't one. 

We can't tell true-seeming stories across insane reaches of time because time destroys stories

and, in relation to scenes and structures bit above, big mass stories for us have to be about the familiar and coherent and the true reaches of time make things unfamiliar and incoherent. 

Imagined Example; 

Author; “Welcome to book six of the Ultimate Super-War saga!” 

Reader; “Hello excuse me, I am a big fan of the Ultimate Super-War Saga” 

Author; “Yes, good. Thank you. Did you enjoy Book Six – Further Ultimate Super-War?” 

Reader; “No! I read the book and the language, characters, moral schema, even the purpose of events, the technology, almost even the spatial structure of things, all of these were completely different!It may as well be a book from a completely different series!” 

Author; “Yes! Its set six THOUSAND years after the previous book in the series (Ultimate Super-War Five; Nightmares of a Darkened Floom).” 

Reader; “So what happened to Leader X and his enemy Supervillain Man, and their great conflict over the Floom Prophecy?” 

Author; “Well.. six-thousand years later all those conflicts are ether resolved and forgotten or unresolved and still forgotten and if you look really really really carefully you will notice in the structure of the societies and moral arguments between individuals in book six, a very slight TRACE of the result and resolution of the Floom Prophecy situation” 

Reader; “This is not what I paid for.”

 

 

Ink Blots 

There is probably a limit we cannot perceive, or fully conceptualise, to our ability to imagine new things. 

A drop of ink falls onto a clean page and expands outwards. Every individual drop of ink will be unique, it can expand and expand, making strange and irregular forms, but it’s almost impossible for the original impact point to not be near the centre of the final blot. 

Everything we think and imagine, no matter how intelligent and perceptive we are, or how creative, or how deeply we can cast out minds into the future, all is based on this lived experience, here on this world, in these bodies. 

So we can think and imagine and think and imagine, conceiving of wilder and wilder realities and possibilities, things that, at the point when we began thinking, would seem beyond imagination. 

But no matter how much we imagine we are still constrained by that first drop of ink hitting the page, the point where we begin. It sets a kind of invisible boundary, not so much to how much we can imagine, but to how much we can think about what we can think. We cannot “get ahead” of the expanding boundary of the ink blot and the ink blot is always broadlycentred on the point where it first fell. 

Specific example here is that all we know of humanity is from this planet, and so whenever we imagine new stuff, no matter how far or how deep we imagine, THIS PLANET and our experience here remains very close to the centre. 

This actually fits well with galactic-expansion paracosms, because in that case, all human life also comes from here and so the expansion is all from this human norm, but it still has to be imagined by one, or a small number of human minds. So; 

***** how much do you really think you can understand another culture? **** 

As an example; Josh Reynolds a writer who up into recently used to work for Black Library, the Games Workshop in-house publisher. 

He wrote a bunch of books for Age of Sigmar. His 'religious stormcast' Hallowed Knights characters have an unusual life and vibrancy, especially in the way they enact, think about and embody the various forms of faith. 

Why? Probably because he is from the American south and grew up in faith communities. How many other Black Library writers did? I think probably none. In fact I would lay a bet that almost every BL writer is a white male, British, lib-left, university graduate from an upper-lower middle class family, that has never or hardly ever gone to church and who voted Remain. 

So - considering the very slight variation between Josh Reynolds and every other BL writer, something that’s easy to see when looking at a small specific community separate to you; expand that understanding to a general scheme and apply it more widely. 

How much do you really actually think you can understand a different culture? Even one culture? 

It’s probably much less than you think, and even then, you have to present it to a mass audience in a way that is coherent and tangible to them considering their cognitive load and available dwell time, and how do you do that? 

You can't. You have to play upon known stereotypes or familiar constructs, produce theatre-of-difference scenes, have explainer characters, have people mirror their tech and environment in a way they don't always do in real life, and why - because you don't HAVE THE FUCKING TIME. 

Herbert had a huge series of books written specifically for a high-difference-desiring niche audience and even he didn't have the time. 

 

 

 

A Synthesis 

(Herbert did USUSUALLY WELL on a large number of these axis, he failure wasn't really a failure compared to other humans, only compared to the immeasurable scale of the task) 

to make a version of "Dune" that *felt* like it was at the stated scale Herbert would have had to

- tell a super long story with not may connections between parts

- invent even more cultures than he did (and he did unusually well)

- have a whole lot of RANDOM SHIT THAT NEVER CAME UP AGAIN

- have space travel totally fuck time in the ass

- have almost all of the start of the story forgotten by the end (even though YOU the reader have not forgotten, and were kind of hoping for a real story in which the end relates to and rounds off the beginning, which history definitely does not do). 

If I have a synthesis here it’s that the desired scale of epic-style storytelling is in conflict, perhaps fundamental, perhaps simply unavoidable conflict, with the very structures and methods which form the stories, which in turn make up the primary medium through which the scale of the imagined world is sensed. 

Just because its impossible doesn’t mean it’s not worthwhile to try. 

The Audience can change and learn. Like I said, Herbert does unusually well - and him doing that well both expanded the possibilities for others and "trained" his audience to deal with some new freaky shit, and now there is a Dune Movie which is pretty popular, so Feudal Future Sci-Fi is now more possible with a mass audience. So “failed” efforts might advance a culture, or at least present new challenges. 

The needle can be threaded more or less beautifully with more or less skill, and can call upon more or less imagination, more or less power of systemic creation. Example; Tolkien - insanely detailed languages, limited economics. Other writers I'm thinking here of someone like K.J. Parker, might do very well with politics and economics but deal with language in a limited way, so though every human effort might be limited and flawed, they could still be notable and original achievements of unique minds. 

And it’s fun. 

 

 

 

(* In fact, I do not look into games at all because I ran out of steam. Sorry!)


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Published on November 02, 2021 10:58

October 26, 2021

Trailing Corposant 7 - Graham and the Machine

Previously in this series;

One - what is the Horus Heresy about?
Two - The Tower. Horus bungles his shot, Black Library makes theirs.
Three - Fulgrim
Four - Autistic Sympathy. The Angels and the Lion.
Five - Shell Game. The Alpha Legion, Abnetts Misfire.
Six - Bottle Novels


I Only Am Escaped Alone to Tell Thee

To call Graham McNeil a ‘survivor’ of the Horus Heresy series might seem ridiculous, but let me explain my reasoning 

Abnett, the Hierophant, the Gene-Father, abandoned his Heresy in the middle and returned to Terra to write Gaunts Ghosts, Inquisition books and hopeful scripts for the ‘Eisenhorn’ series (probably). We cannot really call Abnett a survivor any more than we can call the sky tall. He forms the context by which other writers are judged. 

Dembski-Bowden, Chris Wraight and John French are rising stars not survivors. We only adopted the darkness, but they were born in it

Gav Thorpe arrive 6 years after the birth and is an old statue in the Black Library building they sometimes ask to write a book. A Coelacanth of Warhammer, a crocodile, a survivor yes, but of mass extinctions rather than this particular series. Him reaching the end of the Heresy is like an ancient alligator surviving another meteor. We expect this of him. 

Guy Haley arrives late. 

Nick Kyme edits the thing and doesn’t count. 

Ben Counter – gone. 

Mitchel Scanlon – gone. 

Mike Lee – gone. 

Like the messenger to Job, one writer alone persisted all the way through the Heresy, surviving even after the Emperor abandoned the war, making it even all the way to the Siege. Ok he didn’t get a full book but he got a pair of Novellas to tie up loose threads! 

And that writer is Graham McNeil. A man who perfectly encapsulates the median of Horus Heresy writing in the same way that the sum total of a seismographs readings during an earthquake roughly approximates the level of the land. And McNeil is a seismographic writer, a cardiac arrest writer, in that his quality level is all over the fucking place.


The Machine

Hey humanity, guess who else survived the Age of Strife? And also maintained a planetary technological culture. AND kept sending out colony ships even in the depths of Old Night. And has  FUCKING TITANS, while your main deal is finding someone to kill with the stick you are holding. 

So remind me again, why are you, the Terrans, the Main Characters of humanities renewal? 

Because of ONE MAGIC MAN. 

 

Welcome to Mars 

Hey welcome to Mars! You like vaults of nightmare knowledge which must never be released? Well we got, by canon, at least two; The Vaults of Morovec, which has super-artificial intelligences which may be a bit chaosy, and the Noctis Labytinth, which has probably it’s a sleeping Star God in there who knows, plus the Libraius Omnis, a planet-spanning underground Library that’s too dangerous to actually go into, plus some new AI called the Tabula Myriad which the Iron hands picked up on the Great Crusade and brought here to be “safe”, which definitely isn’t chaosy but does want to destroy all life, , plus some new ones we just worked out like the “Kaban Project”, which yes, is awake now and also seems to have gotten some chaos on it. 

What is our job here one Mars? Is it to understand technology? 

NO! 

It is to control the understanding of technology, because you need it to survive but it wants to KILL YOU AND EVERYTHING THAT IS. 

And we were doing that pretty FUCKING WELL THANK YOU until the “Omnissiah” turned up. 

 

Publication History of the Mechanicum 

Fittingly, the history of fiction about the Mechanicum is older than the Horus Heresy Novel series itself. The earliest I can remember comes from ‘The Horus Heresy – Collected Visions’ book, a short story called


 

‘The Kaban Project’

about a Tech Priest who is given the job of babysitting a machine which turns out to be a full General Intelligence. Which is bad, but also, the Horus Heresy is kicking off and our little guy ends up being chased through Mars by John Blanche tech-assassins. And then the AI turns evil because we were bad to it. 

And who wrote this story? 

That’s right motherfuckers, Graham McNeil. Perhaps the oldest Horus Heresy fiction writer. 

 

Mechanicum 2008 , Novel 

As discussed quite a bit, despite making up a huge chunk of Humanity, being essentially an empire-within-an-Empire, controlling almost all the super-high-intensity war planetary war machines and probably dominating production of high-end tech at least, the Mechanicum get exactly one book to tell us what their deal is and this is it. 

Is it any good? Its ok. 

(An interesting side-point is that one strand of “Mechanium” is about the “Akashic Reader”, a piece of probably-illegal in-development psi-tech that lets the user access the Akashic Records, a warp-located magic library/effect/phenomena that contains “all knowledge”. 

We know that the Emperor has something similar, he seems to have theoretical knowledge or understanding of pretty much all material technologies, though this doesn’t mean he can bring them all into being immediately by himself, Pertuabo also seems to have been gifted something similar, he has a kind of built-in mental library that gives him total knowledge of physical phenomena in a dry and scientific sense, though it still takes him effort and practice to synthesise and utilise this knowledge. 

Is the Emperor plugged into the Akashic Records? Probably, but its not that important for our story.) 

It has a lot about the Void-Dragon Conspiracy and basically the “good guys” go down pretty hard. Most Martian lore is lost. From this point on, Sigismund zips in to grab supplies before the loyalists destroy their won forges to keep them out of enemy hands. From this point on, Mars itself is a sideline and cogboy stories split into three parts; 

 

Strand One – The Dark Mechanicum 

It’s not clear what proportion of martians go over to Horus but it’s a lot, certainly enough to make a good argument that the ‘Dark Mechanicum’ is the True Mechanicum. Spooky transhumanism! They don’t get their own book but the Kelbor-Hal faction turn up in the background of lots of novels. Essentially they are the mechanicum in black robes with extra tentacles, red eye lenses and willing to do shit so fucked up that even the Mechanicum wouldn’t touch it. Particularly in incorporating Psi-Tech into stuff, (one of the things the Emperor specifically forbade), producing psi-alarm mine surveillance things which are basically psyker brains hardwired into expendable agony machines. They also start hanging out with Sorcerers – stuffing demons into things with the usual not-that-replicable or useful effects. Probably their most commonly used tool is “Scrapcode” evil super hacker demon code that blares through and cripples loyalist systems, as seen in the attack on Calth. 

Some things that to be honest, never really come up with them that would be interesting to know about;

 

What Happens to the A.I’s? – One of the things the Emperor told the Cogs not to do and which Kelbor Hal was apparently so slaty about, and which is directly mentioned in “The Kaban Machine”, making real General Intelligences, and then, presumably, doing weird warp shit with them. 

So machines can be corrupted by the warp, do they have souls? Are there evil A.I. demons wandering the Warp? That really feels like a whole faction or design element to me, plus it gives sound reasons for demons in 40k to be able to wield or interact with technology of some kind, even if it is ersatz artisanal demon laptops or whatever. Is there a “machine warp” – everything that is is meant to be reflected there, though non-living things less so… 

What Happened to the Transhumanist Dream? – Another thing the Emperor wouldn’t let them do. Yet later Dark mechanicum stuff, well, lets just say that in many cases, unless you explicity pointed to one set of tentacled biohorrors and said “These are the bad guys” – it would be hard to tell them apart.. 

Do they Do Research or What? – They are allowed to innovate now, and to look deeper into why things work the way they do instead of just how. They are allowed to develop new principals and test them. Are they still all wanking off to STC tech or do they no longer care? Whats the bleeding edge in Eye of Terror Hypertech? Or did they become mediocrities in their own way and instead of “read the instructions” its now “eh, stuff a demon in it, she’ll be alright”. 

Do they still believe in the Machine God? – Kelbor Hals argument was that the Emperor faked being the Omnissiah, not that the Machine God wasn’t real. Presumably at least to start with most of the Dark Mechanicum were believers. But they have met “real” gods now. Are there any still into the Machine God? Or even a new reformed chaos version of the Machine God. 

The Claim to Precedence – A big deal with the Astartes rebellion is the “We conquered this galaxy, and therefore it is ours” (plus we know/suspect that you were planning to pull an Arrarat on us). But the Dark Mechanicum have an even stronger claim to be the true and oldest coherent strand of Humanity. They survived the Age of Strife with their tech intact, they preserved more records than anyone, and recovered more, they maintained the Titans which, who can be certain how old that tech is, their lineage runs back to the DaoT and as stated, they were expanding while everyone else was scratching around. What happens to this opinion?

 

 

Strand Two – Guerrilla War on Mars 

There are a few stories about this, they are ok though not exceptional. Cogboys running around in tunnelling machines, raiding chaos stuff, trying to stay alive and pausing long enough to stare at some super fucked up chaos stuff and go “They fell so far/How could this Happen?/Is there No Hope?/We must fight on!. Honestly I could probably write a random generator for a “standard” Horus Heresy novel by this point. 

 

Strand Three – The Taming of the Loyal Mechanicus

The loyalists who escape to are of small enough numbers and power that integration in to the Imperium as ‘Adepta’ starts to make sense. 

All part of the Emperors super-plan? The Mechanicum was essentially un-tameable, but once split into its chaos and non-chaos factions and the non-chaotics needing the Imperium waaaay more than the old Mechanicum ever did. 

More on this below as it’s the direct subject of at least one story.

 

This is the End

Considered from an in-universe perspective, the Novel ‘Mechanicum’ is the last book in a theoretical, huge series at least the length of the Heresy. The final act of the Martian Mechanicum as it has existed for the last few thousand years. 

It’s an organisation built directly over, really drawing its energy from containing, the central paradoxes of survival of the 40k universe; the cosmos is so totally fucked that to survive you have to take paths so awful that survival itself seems to lose any positive meaning. 

As embodied by the many locked vaults of Mars – which nightmare would you prefer? Chaos-infected AI’s? Anti-Life AIs? Consumption by a machine hive-mind? Become fuel for a Star God like the Necrons? 

The pre-Emperor Mechanicum, and the Cult of the Machine, was based on a twist of logic and strangled emotion – technology is the means of our survival/the means of our destruction, worship the machine but take it no further, adore knowledge in the abstract but keep it and rarely use it. Humanity is Holy, do not pervert it or produce machines that think as men, yet Humanity is vile and corrupted, replace its flesh with metal, make it like the machine. 

All these Nightmare Possibilities held under the surface of Mars, actually literally in some cases but more potently metaphorically – the choice that refuses all options. No singularity, but no retreat to primitivism, no demons or AI’s or star gods, we have a god and it is the machine, but no transformation into the machine, except our bodies, but our minds must remain… 

A culture getting as close to the brink as it possibly can and holding itself exactly there

And this mad path actually worked surprisingly well. They held onto much of the knowledge of the Dark Age of Technology and managed not to misuse most of it. They kept or built titans and interstellar travel, they didn’t get eaten by chaos or AIs and remained some kind of continuity with what it means to be human. Even in the depths of the Age of Strife they were still trying to colonise, recover and expand, and not only the resources to attempt it but the will to use those resources. 

And they kept a lid on all the weird shit in the Nightmare vaults while doing so. 

With the Loss of Innocence, that Paradox collapses. One huge chunk of the culture falls to the Warp and to a nightmare version of Futurism, while the non-chaotic remnant is tied ever more forcefully to the Emperors Dream at exactly the point at which it is collapsing, ultimately becoming simply an arm of an Empire that can likely only die. A powerful arm for sure, maybe the most powerful single group, but still not the Mechanicum of old. 

And all of the knowledge that wasn’t made ash is now even more toxic, radioactive, poisonous and corruptive than it was before. They can clench it and guard it but do nothing with it.

 

Cybernetica, Novella , Rob Sanders, 2015 

A story about some Tech Marines from different chapters sent to Mars for training who start to realise that something is up

THIS is interesting. Largely because the first part is just a very solid story that neatly encapsulates the characters of the different legions and marines (Iron Hands guy is a genius and this is a super high status position for him, Ultramarines guy is quite good at everything but unexceptional and a bit of a rules monkey, though better at actually dealing with people, Raven Guard guy is only here because injuries mean his bionic body can’t be stealthy any more and is a moody paranoid tit obsessed with becoming a Cyberpunk Hacker), while the rising tension and increasing weirdness of the situation on Mars; loss of contact, news feed goes darks/starts acting weird, are we the only ones left in the building?/are those Titans walking on the Horizon?, is a bit more what it might feel like when the impossible or unimaginable suddenly becomes real and life turns into a horror movie.

 

Myriad, Rob Sanders, 2016 

A continuation of the story of ‘Cybernetica’ in which the good-guy Raven Guard escapee meets up with Malcador and Rogal who still don’t really know what to do about Mars except trickle in operatives like this guy using dangerous hypertech to fight the other dangerous hypertech to hopefully stop the whole thing from exploding in their faces before the war ends. 

Basically a pot is overboiling and the Imperium responds by dropping in frozen peas one by one to cool it down. 

This story also has the Tabula Myriad, one of the Weird Fucking Things kept on mars, a kind of hyperdimensional clockwork AI dedicated to fighting chaos and which has, like many AI’s do, decided that the best way to do this is to destroy Humanity/Life. 

 

Into Exile, 2016, ADB Short 

 A decent short story in which an Imperil Fist goes to rescue Arkhan Land from Mars so he can be in “Master of Mankind” 

 

The Binary Succession

Audio Drama collected in the Burden of Loyalty 2017 

The Loyalist Cogboys are having an absolute fucking meltdown as it becomes increasingly clear that the Imperium has zero interest in trying to re-take Mars until the battle for Terra is over, one way or another. Plus they are less powerful relative to the Terrans than they have ever been. Plus the only other option is tentacles (biological ones, blech) from teaming up with Horus. 

(Added to that there is the matter of Beta-Garmon, but more on that below.) 

To survive they need to become the ‘Adeptus Mechanicus’, something which would have been absolutely intolerable, even inconceivable, pre-Istvaaan. 

Plus the Imperium is not happy about having a new super-powerful branch of the Adepta at exactly this time. 

So – schemes, shenanigans, arguments, assassinations and a Titan gets involved and whop de doo the Adeptus Mechanicus is created.  

 

Titandeath, novel Guy Haley 2018

Looked at from the Perspective of the Mechanicum, one of the most important things they control is the ultimate lords of high intensity planetary warfare; the Titan Legions. 

Unfortunately for them, neither Horus or Rogal want to see a mass titan-walk on Terra as there would be nothing left of the planet afterwards, so through the strange tacit communication of war and to the misfortune of the people of Beta-Gamon, they both decide to essentially piss away the greater part of their Titan strength in a brutal attritional throwdown on that particular planet. 

They are spending the coin the Dark Mechanicum/Loyalist Mechanicum gave them, each simply to neuter the other and to preserve Terra as a scene for drama. 

Which, imagine how fucking insanely angry the Cogboys would be about this; The Titans are sacred avatars of the Machine God. 

And the sum result of the battle is that the Cogboys on either side are massively de-powered relative to the other forces on their own side. 

What a stitch-up.

 

Mortis, Novel John French 2021 

The Cogs are a side-element in this and, from their perspective at least, it largely continues the themes of ‘Titandeath’ – baddy Titans and Goody Titans duke it out around the Palace. Good guys are good and brave but bad guys have more Titans plus are buzzing their tits off on warp dust so are putting together intensely weird shit. 

Bad guys win. But have few Titans left. Good guys unify at the last minute but have few, possible no, Titans left. 

 

There We Have It 

Barring any big surprises in the last two novels, so ends the story of the Mechanicum of Mars in the Horus Heresy, a tale which arguably started the whole thing off, which in novel form, ended at its beginning and finished on a dying fall. 

Which, curiously enough, are qualities they share with Graham McNeil….

 

 


Grahams Crackers 

Its an unfair title, he is a bit of an oddity but by the standards of Black Library writers it hardly shows, and indeed, who and I to talk? Yet a pun is a pun and the old law may not be denied. 

Despite writing a SHITOAD of stuff for the Heresy, McNeills work can be broken down into a few strands;


Horus and His Dad

In “The Last Church” (Short Story) we meet one of the last priests on earth, who is about to be stomped on by the Emperor. Before he does, they both sit down for a fireside chat. This is one of the very few times we hang out directly with the Emperor and he speaks something like his mind so its very depressing how mediocre the story, and the philosophy behind it is. Why does the Emperor want to destroy religion? Because RELIGION BAD! GOD BAD! READ DAWKINS! A disappointment. 

In “The Wolf of Ash and Fire” (Short Story)- HORUS FIGHTS ORKS WITH DAD. Its hangout time!





Father and son chilling out and having fun. The Emperor nearly dies and Horus saves him. Was it a real actual near-death experience or part of some grand theatre to help build trust with his son? By exposing his (theoretical) vulnerability before Horus did E increase his fidelity or in some way put a crack in it? These are questions that we (and Horus) will be asking for a while. And actually are still asking. 

In “False Gods” which we discussed at length in post two, Graham takes over the Heresy from Abnett and does, well not a great job but not a terrible one considering the challenge he was set. 

In the short story Death of a Silversmith, chaos Infiltrates the Luna Wolves, the Lodges were evil! Its not a bad small tale. 

The rest of this strand are built around the Battle for Molech

Horus manages to untangle supressed or edited memories showing that E took him and some other Primarchs to a planet called Molech where they did something warp gate tum tiddly tum who knows. Horus wants his memories back and the power he thinks is on offer so invades Molech, facing a fair whack of an Imperial Force, and, an immortal woman who used to know Big E back in the day and who has been set there to guard the warp gate at its heart. In a slightly tiresome sub-plot, moody Loken “infiltrates” the Vengeful Spirit and shouts at his dad. On Molech the planetary government is infiltrated by a Slaanesh sex/snake cult using TIME LOOPS and its Knight House turns traitor and ends the war. 

The story confirms that E made a deal with Chaos for at least some of his power, that he brought a bunch of Primarchs here for.. well it looks like he was planning to trade them back to Chaos for an easy life. (Or was he offering the Primarchs he thought he could turn back from Chaos afterwards??) Horus enters the Courts of Chaos and gets a massive level-up, the power of which is very inconsistently dealt with in subsequent books, but the psychological hollowing-out of which is actually pretty well described. 

The Snake-Cult setup is in The Devine Adoratrice, the main event is in Vengeful Spirit, which means they cant use that name for the last book of the Heresy, which is annoying. A final strand of this story follows the fleeing immortal guardian though Wolf Mother and Old Wounds, New Scars

This Lady meets Malcador in Fury of Magnus, and in a weird fucking scene she trades her immortality/is robbed/vampirised by Malcador in a quite unpleasant way. A story strand based around E maybe doing child sacrifice (confirmed IRL history as the Carthiniginians would sacrifice children to their god Molech) ends with an immortal mother sacrificing herself to get her mortal children and normie husband just  little more safety in the apocalypse. 

Is this a deliberate echoing? Well McNeil is a seismograph writer so could go either way. 

People being oiled up – only in the snake cult stuff.

 

 

Magnus Did Nothing Wrong

 

Its time to take a wild ride with the Thousand Sons! Our story start with the titular A Thousand Sons, a very solid McNeil book, maybe his best, which introduces Ahriman, Magnus, his legion and their completely reasonable ideology of preserving human knowledge and how the illiterate space wolves are a bunch of twats. It begins with Ahrimans actual birth-brother mutating into a chaos spawn after taking the 1ksons gene seed, which traumatises Ahriman for life. 

here

From here https://www.deviantart.com/brierknigh...

1k Sons itself covers a lot of ground, taking us all the way from the crusade, through the Council of Nikea to Magnus Zoom-Calling his dad by hurling the laptop through the front window, to Magnus finally seeing Tzeentch for the first time, realising how utterly fucked he is and has always been/will be and having a nervous breakdown while the Space Wolves arrive with doctored orders and begin to annihilate Prospero. Russ breaks Magnus’ back and shatters his soul, but not before Magnus makes  one more deal with Tzeentch to save his boys. 

The rest of this line brings us through the Heresy with the 1k Sons trying to work out what to do. Ahriman does some scrying in Thief of Revelations. We get a Special Guest Appearance (audience applauds) from Lucius: The Eternal Blademaster, before the 1k Sons try to put dad back together in The Crimson King. Magnus who is by no means whole or sane, declares that he will join the Siege of Terra, but not for Normie reasons but to get back the last bit of his Soul, the really good bit. Something happens in Morningstarbut I honestly don’t remember much until we hit The Fury of Magnus which Black Library were only willing to make a Novella in the Siege of Terra Series, but hey, you got to the end Graham! 

As Magnus infiltrates the Palace and gets closer to E, some of the Chaos is knocked off him and he gets a lot les violent and insane. He meets Malcador who tells him that his desired soul-bit has already been converted into the first master of the Grey Knights, and furthermore, all his terrible behaviours are his own to deal with, he still has free will and can’t blame his bullshit on having soul bits missing. Magnus  kicks his ass, before hauling it to the Golden Throne where he confronts dad directly. 

Dad tells Magnus he can still come back. But also tells Magnus that there is absolutely no way his legion will survive without being mutated and basically for them its spawndom or a bullet, and this was always the case, the Thousand Sons Gene Line was a mistake

But come back and I’ll give you a better Legion. 

Magnus asks Vulkan “Would you take this deal?” and Vulkan says no fucking way. Magnus freaks the fuck out, decides he will not abandon his Legion and FUCK YOU DAD and leaves/is forcibly ejected way, waaaay out of the battlespace, he will take no more part in the Siege. 

Was the Emperor expecting Magnus to say “yes” to this bullshit deal? Probably he was not. The most likely and reasonable assumption is that he expected a violent “No!” and the whole offer and rejection was orchestrated theatre which tied his fallen son ever more tightly to his Legion. Likely with some deep-future strands of fate shenanigans. 

Or maybe E is being written as the dummy he was in ‘The Last Church’. 

Seismograph! 

People Being Oiled Up – I’m pretty sure Magnus is before his disastrous zoom call


 

Fulgrim and Peter Turbo - Oiled Muscles 

In Fulgrim, which we have talked about at length, Fulgrim becomes a junkie and gets trapped in a painting/possessed by a demon. 

Now we get The Reflection Crack'd (Novella) - THIS IS THE ONE THIS IS THE FUCKING ONE!!!!! 

Remember how I told you, right at the start of this series of posts that one of the most important things about the Horus Heresy is that a Primarch is anally violateT by a torture apple (a pear of anguish) and is into it and that this is canon? Well this is where that happens! The E-Kids want their Primarch back and McNeil wants to repair the clusterfuck he created in ‘Fulgrim’ so things get really fucking weird

Then we get Angel Exterminatus in which Fulgrim hangs out with Perty and tries to eat his soul while becoming a demon prince. This book is fun but mainly about Perty so I will leave a deep dive till later. This book also has an encounter with the ‘Shattered Legions’ Saturday Morning Cartoon Colour Coded Heroes Squad – the raven guard guy shoots Fulgrim in the head and kills Lucius but doesn’t suffer the Slaaneshy Swordsman’s curse in which if you take even a little bit of pride in beating Lucius, he grows inside you like a cancer, because the Cartoon Raven Guard guy is just so unfathomable based I suppose. 

People Being Oiled – So, so so so much oil. Fulgrim is nicely oiled to begin with and end up dripping in it. Think perty may be oiled at one point.

 

Shattered Legions - The Saturday Morning Cartoon Series

 

A Raven Guardy Raven guard, Iron handsy Iron Hand, Slamandery Salamander and whoever the fuck else wander about and have adventures by a bunch of different writers. Graham only does a few of these; Kryptosand The Either, before finishing up their adventures in another Siege of Terra Novella Sons of Selenar, which is interesting mainly because of the world-elements in it. 

“Sons” has an ancient space rock near Terra which dates from a very old age of exploration, we go in deep into the Selenar Gene Witches who Horus conquered in his first signature battle, the tangled web between the extrely-female Selenar and the extremely-male Astartes and finally a big gene vault of knowledge is rescued from the baddies and hidden away to become a bit of modern 40k lore – it’s the thingy Bellasarius Cawl uses to help make Primaris. 

Knots – TIED. 

People Being Oiled – I can’t remember any but if you can leave a comment below.

 


Mars!

 

 

Only The Kaban Project and Mechanicum, which we have already spoken of at length. Not a huge number of works in volume but important signature ones for this group. Plus McNeil goes deeper on the ‘modern’ AdMech in other books.


 

Life on Terra

 

A ridiculous but fun story where both McNeil and the editors forget exactly when things happen. The backwash from Magnus’s Zoom Call wrecks a big chunk of the psychic infrastructure of Terra and an Astropath gets a Mcguffin stuck in his head and has to go on the run with possibly-traitor Astartes from the Traitor legions who have been trapped on Terra for so long the actually may not be Traitors. The Astropath communes with E who basically shrugs and says “strands of fate, what can I do?” 

McNeil puts a Samurai in this one for some reason. It also has a Thunder Warrior! A handful survived in the depths of the Terran underworld. Will they turn up again before the end? Only two books to find out. FOR UNITY! 

People Being Oiled – I got nothin’.

 

And finally

 

Miscellaneous Stories!

They might link to stuff, but not to McNeil-dominant strands. In The Dark King  Konrad has a Mental. In Rules of Engagement - Robute Cosplays as Horus… for important strategic training reasons! Not because he was into it! In Calth That Was, something happens on Calth but I can be damned if I can remember what, think it was more Ultramarines stuff and in Luna Mendax Loken Has a Mental and does gardening on the moon. 

People Being Oiled – I barely remember these stories but I hope someone was!

 

 

Who Is Graham McNeil?

How shall we remember him?

 

McNeil the Ancient Mason

The Heresy stalwart who in some ways, nearly started the whole Heresy Fiction thing off. The guy who was in at the birth, kept going through all adventures, survived whatever weird shit was going on in Black Library HQ and made it to the end (in Novellas). The decent workman who tied shit up when it needed tying? 

 

 

McNeil the Blank Grinder Profile

The man who was very much into queer-coded-decadencewhen it was appropriate for the character and hey, even when it wasn’t. The man who never saw a Primarch he couldn’t oil. The man who shoved a torture device up Fulgrims arse.

 

 

McNeil the Weaver of Threads

The man who made a subtle tapestry on the theme of deific child sacrifice, who lead a surprisingly sympathetic immortal through hell to a reckoning that perhaps the Emperor could never make? The man who showed us Horus’ and Magnus’ dealings with the Emperor in ways that still leave us asking – was it idiocy, or strands of fate?

 

 

McNeil the Utter Dingus

The man who wrote “The Last Church” and the very eh, Horus-is-a-dummy “False Gods”. The ding-dong who had a space ninja raven guard kill Lucius and just decide to be chill about it. The man who, despite writing most of the Magnus-dicks-with-fate scenes, still sort of forgot exactly when the Zoom Call happened.. The man who wrote Magnus’ silly speech at the Council of Nikea. The man who had Space Marines fight a Samurai.

 

 

McNeil the Man!


Aye, he was a fool at times, and many of his monuments are fallen and a waste strewn across his palaces. 

YET LOOK WHAT PALACES THEY WERE! For he was a man! By god he was rubbish some of the time but he came with a full heart none the less. He gave us the extra-creepy duel between Horus and the bearer of the Athame, he gave us one of the best Pertuabo stories, he to a large degree, built much of the Ad Mech. He put together almost the whole of the Thousand Sons arcand he did a damn good job of it. Snooty space wizards aren’t necessarily an easy sell, and neither is Giant Red Hubristic Man, but he pulled it together (largely) in “A Thousand Sons”, “The Crimson King” and pretty much in “Fury of Magnus”. 

A Thousand Sons was meant to be a paired book with Abnetts Space Wolf stuff and I think it’s better. 

This is Graham McNeil. A flawed man for sure, but a man with the power of his guts and his heart. A man whose (sometimes many) failings, throw into relief the central arc of his forwardness, courage, boldness and invention. A heroes arc. Not a Grand Hero but an ordinary, sometimes un-regarded hero, a man with powers alike unto our own and a serious oiled torso fetish who made himself a hero through his blood, sweat, joy an oil. 

Clench yourself upon the apple of his mind and bid him a fond farewell.

 

 

 

 

Yet…

 

Who is the third

 “Who is the third who walks always beside you?

When I count, there are only you and I together
But when I look ahead up the white road
There is always another one walking beside you
Gliding wrapt in a brown mantle, hooded
I do not know whether a man or a woman
-But who is that on the other side of you?”

 

That, my friends, is the shadow of James Swallow. And we shall read of him but later, in another time more fit to the task.



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Published on October 26, 2021 11:25

October 21, 2021

The Dover Beach Expanded Universe

 Having finally finished 'Titus Alone' and completed the Gormenghast cycle, what sticks out?



I DIDN'T REMEMBER THE FLOOD
I read Gormenghast ages ago, the whole trilogy, turns out I remembered almost nothing about Titus Alone and HAD FORGOTTEN THE ENTIRE LAST BIT OF GORMENGHST!
Flay dies! Steepikes insane cockerel dance! This is maybe one of the best parts in the whole book, simultaneously ridiculous, chilling, manic, incoherent yet perfectly and entirely RIGHT as the madness which has been building inside Steepike all this time finally breaks out and he struts and caws like a fucking maniac around the bodies of the two sisters.
Charles R StewartHere for the full set

The entire castle floods. Titus' mum goes into overdrive, runs UNINSTALL: AUTISM.EXE and becomes the leader who organises everything and is instrumental in the systemic capture of Steerpike. Everyone moves to the roofs, the Bright Carvers carve wonderous boats for the now-naval castle. Steerpike is cornered! Titus is carried across the rooftops in a palanquin, wasted from exhaustion and picking at a bag of nuts his mind thrums with dreams of vengeance against Steerpike while a whole bunch of guys labour to carry him smoothly across the rooftops of Gormenghast above the still waters of the flood. the Lord of Gormenghast at last.
Titus fights Steerpike in the Ivy! How did I forget this stuff? This book doesn't go off on a dying fall the ending is based as fuck. Also fuck you Peake for killing both 'The Thing' and 'Fuschia' you fucking absolute son of a bitch.




TITUS IS ALONE AND ANNOYING
Titus really is intolerable in 'Titus Alone'.
You can tell he's a real member of the upper class because even lost alone, penniless and wearing rags in an alien city, owning only a rock (which he loses fighting a robot), his version of suffering still consists of running between the houses of reasonably well-resourced members of the upper class, being fed and waterd, occasionally banging someone out of his age range, crying about his sorrows, mooning about being edgy and mysterious, then fucking off somewhere else for mysterious reasons.
Truly the ultimate gap year.
Titus is a man in his early 20s, born of wealth and raised by a family of non-evil though often dangerously mad, sorry, "extra-neurodiverse" people. Plus his dad was murdered and sister "committed suicide" and he himself killed a guy in a knife fight before he ran away from home. So him being a flighty self-involved needy tit is pretty accurate, but still not fun to read, especially after a while.



ITS A BIT OFF
It’s really a sketch of a book, at least compared to 'Titus Groan' and 'Gormenghast', though still pretty good compared to other more-normal books.
Peake always had this slightly stagey element to some of his writing, it came out especially in the first book in the parts about the wetnurse from the outer dwellings who has her own little serious romantic tragedy where people speak quite differently than the highly particular and peculiar individual speech patterns of the castle. They talk like stagey declarative romantic heroes, which was fine there, in that part but now it seeps a little more into everything.
Titus Alone only really gets a good villain in the last half. Cheetah - the Head Scientist  daughter is at least in the same class as Steerpike, if not on the same level.


WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK
What the absolute fuck is going on with Cheeta and her "father"? 
...
"They lead her to a reception room. The ceiling was matted with crimson wires. There was a black glass table of unnatural length, and at the far end of the room the wall was monopolised by an opaque screen like a cods eye.
Eleven men stood in a row while their leader pressed a button.
What's that peculiar smell? said Cheeta.
Top secret,' said the eleventh man.
'Miss Cheeta,' said the twelfth man. 'I am putting you through.'
After a moment or two an enormous face appeared on the opaque screen. It filled the wall.
'Miss Cheeta?' it said.
'Shrivel yourself,' said Cheeta. 'You're too big.'
'Ha, ha, ha!' said the huge face. 'I keep forgetting.
The face contracted, and went on contracting. 'Is this better?' it said.
'More or less,' said Cheeta. 'I must see Father.'
'Your father is at a conference, said the image on the screen. It was still over life-size and a small fly landing on his huge dome of a forehead appeared the size of a grape.
'Do you know who I am?' said Cheeta in her faraway voice.
'But of course... of..'
'Then stir yourself.'
The face disappeared and Cheeta was left alone.
After a moment she wandered to the wall that faced the cod's-eye screen and played delicately across a long row of coloured levers that were as pretty as toys. So innocent they looked that she pressed forward, and at once there was a scream.
'No, no, no!' came the voice. 'I want to live'
'But you are very poor and very ill,' said another voice, with the constistency of porridge. 'You're unhappy. You told me so.'
'No, no, no! I want to live. I want to live. Give me a little longer.'
Cheeta switched the lever and sat down at the black table.
As she sat there, very upright, her eyes closed, she did not know that she was being watched. When at last she raised her head she was annoyed to see her mother.
'You!' she said. 'What are you doing here?'
'Its absorbing, you know, said Cheeta's mother. 'Daddy lets me watch.'
'I wondered where you got to every day,' muttered her daughter. 'What on earth do you do here?'
'Fascinating,' said the scientists wife, who never seemed to answer anything."
...........
What the ever-loving fuck. Congratulations Swelter, you may have died in Gormenghast but your spirit lives on I guess. At least the book finally gets a villain in the same league, if not on the same level, as Steerpike.





MUZZLEHATCH IS THE HERO
And really the better character in this book. It should really have been called GORMENGHAST THREE; MUZZLEHATCHES REVENGE!! (THIS TIME.. ITS PERSONAL!!)
Cormorant fishers at the start by the river, Muzzlehatch racing through the city in his insane archaic car, Muzzlehatch racing through the country, stopping in a village to be assessed by old men, stopping to watch a sunset and someone tries to rent him a chair. All of this strikes me as very euro-expat
feels a lot like some kind of expat holed up in a pre-war Chinese city running a zoo or something, living as a half-barbarian.
Muzzlehatch pretty much does everything, rescuing Titus in his alligator car, talking down a camel, rescuing Juno who is rescuing Titus at a ball, getting Titus to safety in the under-river, rescuing Titus from the Concentration Camp Guard in the knife fight as he literally does a fucking batman-drop from the rafters, racing in his car, having Blake-visions of his dead animals, rescuing Titus AGAIN in the gormenghast-masque at the end and revealing "Oh yeah, also I nuked Aushwitz earlier today" before being killed by TWO Robocops (because one wouldn't be enough).

Rodney Matthews. More High fantasy than I was thinking but captures the spirit


Truly, he was a large-faced man. 

(Is the whole thing just Flay vs Swelter/Swelter redux? With Muzzlehatch the neo-Flay and the Scientists Factory a new gigantic Swelter?) 




TITUS KILLS AN AI WITH A ROCK
"Then all at once he halted, for he became aware of something floating beside him, at the height of his shoulders.
It was a sphere no bigger than the clenched fist of a child, and was composed of some transparent substance, so pellucid that it was only visible in certain lights, so that it seemed to come and go.
...
This time as Titus watched it he could see that it was filled with glittering wires, an incredible filigree like frost on a pane; and then, as a cloud moved over the sun, and a dim, sullen light filled the windowless street, the little hovering globe began to throb with a strange light like a glow worm.
...
Then, as though restless, it sped, revolving on its axis, to the far end of the street where it turned about immediately and sang its way back to where it hung again five feet from Titus, who, fishing his knuckle of flint from his pocket, slung it at the hovering ball, which broke in a cascade of dazzling splinters, and, as it broke there was a kind of gasp, as though the globe had given up its silvery ghost ... as though it had a sentience of its own, or a state of perfection so acute that it entered, for the split second, the land of the living."
...
"'Just toys, boy, just toys. They can be simple as an infants rattle, or complex as the brain of man. Toys, toys, toys, to be played with. As for the one you chose to smash, number LKZ00572 ARG 39 576 Aiij9843K2532 if I remember rightly, I have already read about it and how it is reputed to be almost human. Not quite, but _almost_. So THAT is what has happened? You have broken something quite hideously efficient. You have blasphemed against the spirit of the age. You have shattered the very spear-head of advancement. having committed this reactionary crime, you come to me. Me! This being so, let me peer out of the window. It is always well to be watchful. These globes have origins. Somewhere or other there's a backroom boy, his soul working in the primordial dark of a diseased yet sixty horse-power brain.'
...
'You have only destroyed a miracle,' said Muzzlehatch. 'Who knows how pregnant with possibilities that globe could be? Why, you dunderhead, a thing like that could wipe out half the world. Now, they'll have to start again."`




THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN JUNO AND MUZZLEHATCH
This feels like the realest thing in the book. Two people, both in some ways the "best" people of their somewhat shitty cultural milieux, both attracted to each other - drawn together, but they know each other too well, have dicked each other around too much (probably that was mainly Muzzlehatch really), are too familiar with each others strangeness and trouble to get on , but still there is this deep, complex, hidden emotion. That felt like the most grown-up thing in the book. Maybe the only fully-developed human relationship.




WHAT ON EARTH IS GOING ON WITH MODERINITY
Scientists are evil. Policemen are robots. Titus kills an A.I. with a rock. Muzzlehatch blows up Belsen/Monsanto. Clearly the 20th century has not turned out as hoped for. 
Further than that, is Peake having a breakdown about the nature/content of his own Imagination? Gormenghast is real/unreal, a figment, a distant hope, an undiscovered space. Gormenghast is the gritty, cruel but extremely based ancien' regime rising up to battle the horrors of the future. Gormenghast was a waste of time - see the author in the Under-River sleeping on and being carted around with stacks of his great 'Epic' which he dumped his life into but which nobody read. Gormenghast is a fantasy you need to get over. Gormenghast is hope.



IF T'WER REAL - THE DOVER BEACH EXPANDED UNIVERSE
Titus has clearly been going for a long time before the story starts, and he's been chased by the Robocop Policemen things for a while. They are more like Harold-Pinter robocops - fleshless immutable avatars of some unknown authority. Is there some story we didn't get because Peake was very sick? Or was he just like; nope - cold open, lost in wilderness, chased by police.
Eventually he makes it downriver to the city. What do we know about the city and its world? 
It has poorish areas like a Victorian warren. Its middle-class or ruling class areas are very late 20th century high-modernist, with wide Corbusier-style boulevards, large empty desolate spaces and lots of glass and steel. In these places there are parties - heaving upper middle class cocktail parties full of stretched sweating people going on beneath glass roofs, like parties from Ballard.
And it has cars and motorways. Highways, and these seem to have the same kind of urban desolation that ours have, cars swooshing past indifferent, beggars hiding in the verges. It has villas for the rich - Juno has one and the Chief Scientist has one, and the chief scientist has grounds or a zone of some sort in which he has enough space for a park, a nice lake and fucking Belsen crossed with the Apple Compound for all your genocide-plus-eugenics-plus-hey-lets-improvise-with-people needs.
It has an underworld - a tunnel or series of tunnels under the river where the poor and refugees go, and there are lots of places to be refugees from. Something called the "Iron Shore" where I think there are salt mines, "Camps" of some kind, the man Titus tries to fight comes from one of those, he was a guard, and there are enough poor, not just poor but non-state actors, people the authorities would actively hunt, that they can fill the Under-River.
And it has "unexplored" areas, or areas that are not known well, in which sometimes there are ruins - the last part of the book takes place in a ruin deep in this forest in which people don't know the area that well, but they know about the ruin from explorations, yet clearly never felt the need to go back there.
And, as we find out in the last scene of the book - it has Gormenghast, a place which is real, though to find it, Titus has to take a jet plane or helicopter a very long way, then jump out in a parachute, then walk for aaages, and then he can just about see the tops of its towers.
Now it sort-of exists in a world, and has other places to compare it to, Gormeghast has gone from being absolutely horrific, in the early descriptions of the first book, to not that bad actually, in the later parts of the second book, especially when Steerpike is trying to bring it down, to actually pretty great in Titus Alone, especially when you compare it to the City, the Chief Scientists Factory and the Under-River. Scrubbing floors like your dad did doesn't look so bad now does it! 
(This just lends credence to the Gormenghast-Is-Britain theory strand.)
So what is this world, if it were real?. 
It’s not much like the "Empire of Gormenghast" that I imagined at the start. The thing it most reminds me of is the Post-Post-Apocalypse lands of YA fiction, we have gotten past the mad max bits and rebuilt society in a funny new shape, "ever since the Event...", in which the signs and symbols of the current age are scrambled re-mixed and sometimes literalised. There is enough tech for people to do tech things but the planetary society which removes easy wilderness has died back, so now there is room for mystery adventure and discovery.
It’s also reminds me of vague memories of 60's British black and white "symbolic" sci fi. Like how bits of Harold Pinter and Samuel Beckett are technically sci-fi-ish or could be read so. I think that’s more appropriate and also less boring than thinking about post apocalypse YA fiction more than I already have.



The Pinter/Beckett/Peake/Better Early-Dr-Who (plus throw in some Ballard) expanded black-and-white universe sounds more interesting. More about people having guarded conversations in rooms about terrible events, (which they never mention directly).





Everyone has early 20th century Anglo manners. "It is a little grim with those metal fellows. Not.. not of course that I have anything against them myself. Live and let live, that’s what I always say", the anguished psychic of the turning point of the 2th century, with Aushwitz in the rear mirror, and the Gagarin, the moonshot and the Cold War in the forward screen. Computers made up of blinking lights, "Fiendishly clever you know, these things." Tech but few of the later "appearance" of tech - robots are either very obvious metal-faced men who don't do much or just an ordinary person you know who either admits or accepts "You know Winstanley I do rather think I might be an automata." [smokes pipe]. There's a governing A.I. "The Big Machine", but it doesn't text you, or send drones, but a boy on a bicycle with a telegram; "Blue paper mister Winstanley! Is it from them upstairs? Quite an event round here Sir.' 'Yes yes, that’s enough lad, back on your rounds young man and keep your nose clean."




There is a "wilderness" where the psychic wash of the Central European Bloodlands/Post-Nuclear Wasteland lies, but almost nothing is set there, instead everything is in these small rooms or very tense parties.


(When the Wind Blows by Raymond Briggs is another good tonal match)


Scenes of cliché masqued balls where robots pretend to be humans dressed as wizards while Wasteland "Gammas" serve drinks (Brave New World would be another influence). 
There are terrible events or terrible possibilities, but we never see them on-screen or play them out in action, instead a light goes on, or an alarm or bleeping noise plays and a name is printed out or a civilised fellow in a neat suit comes out and calls your name - and then you "have to go"


And everyone has mid 20th Century Anglo manners so they do actually go without kicking up too much of a fuss "Oh dear, oh dear, I knew it had to happen but I am a bit surprised its me. Well there it is I suppose."


Apart from one character who is common/foreign/northern and freaks out when the light goes off "No! No no no! I won't! There TEARING THEM APART IN THERE! THERE TEAR.." [falls unconscious to discreetly administered needle, other characters wince sympathetically at each other, maybe roll their eyes].
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Published on October 21, 2021 06:35

October 18, 2021

A Review of 'The Corner That Held Them' by Sylvia Townsend-Warner

Why did I read this book about nuns by a communist lesbian and why did I like it?
I can answer one of those questions, the other I can "explore"


First one is easy; Emma Gregory
I didn't read it, I listened to it. I live alone and only Audible can distract me from the cats and the voices which I certainly hope are talking behind the wall on the neighbours side of my semi-detached house.
This usually means an unending selection of Warhammer books (after finishing the Horus Heresy I couldn't kick the habit). Near continual audibling has given me an ear for audiobook readers like a neurotic Picardy farmers taste for wine. It’s a strange and subtle job, few single individuals who aren't the writer can affect the quality of a story in the same way and to the same extent; the vile made tolerable, the medium given uplifted and the good given wings. Likewise a bad narrator, or just a poor fit, can grind a tale down into the black earth.
Of the art and science of narration, that may be an investigation for another time. For now; few narrators can handle Warhammer Fiction, only a handful of women ever did any and one in particular very strongly stood out as being exceptionally good at it. Emma Gregory; the 'Watchers of the Throne' series, the voice of Jeneta Krole in 'Saturnine' and seriously punching up a mid-range book in 'Neferata: Dominion of Bones'.
Looking for more of an Emma Gregory kick I wend wandering in Audible. Most of the other books looked boring and this one 'The Corner that Held Them' was newly recorded and seemed interesting.



WHAT IS THIS BOOK
It is the story of a convent in England, from its founding in the mid 12th century, for perhaps two hundred years, following it through several generations of nuns, dipping in and out of the story or the continuity of their shared lives.
Nothing I've read seems quite like it but the think closest in tone and structure might be '100 Years of Solitude, and the sci fi rip-off of that - which I forget the name of. 'Corner' doesn't have any magical realism but in the same "story of the place through the people" deal and mild absurdism mixed with muted non-dramatic tragedy and the strange patternings of life, it fits there best.




HOW IT IS THAT I KIND OF NEARLY DIDN'T LIKE IT ALMOST
What is the story in a nutshell? - there nearly isn't one, or at least not one that can be summed up. It is nearly exactly a "slice of time". There are many dramas and mysteries, several deaths, even a murder, but its not a "dramatic" book. These things simply happen as part of the patterning of life. The murderer is never caught or brought to justice and the big "sleeping elephant" of the "plot" (the convent priest is a fake and was never ordained and so by church law none of his services are valid and all his confessions may be as well they never happened) also never comes to light. The individual stories mesh and roll against and through each other. So what is it about?


THE CROWD
Probably at some point you have looked out at a crowd of people and tried to hold within your mind the interior spaces within each of them, each one as deep as your own, with their own personal motivations and differing drives and dreams.
Inside they are like deep laden cargo vessels with black holds, or great wallowing airships carrying bric-a-brac and secret treasures, strange and echoing within - but they fleet and skip past each other like raindrops on a window, engaged on some great mutual business which brings them into contact here and there, brushing against each other in these tenuous social handshakes and half-act plays.
Then probably you give up even trying to imagine it and go about your day. It’s too much!
The book is about that really, a polyscale vision from the deep interiority of peoples lives, up through their social webs, their buildings, hierarchies, landscape, economy and culture, all as one, held, as the eye of a writer, like a hawks eye, can stay hovering, open and focused upon a great land which they pull back and forth before the, seeing at once the mountains and the dreams.




THE PURSE
Economics - really a huge amount of the structure and "story" and motivating drive for many characters in the second half comes from debt, going into it, servicing it and trying to claim it.
In the first half of the book one of the head nuns gets a vision that she should build a spire on the convent. This goes horribly wrong, becoming a massive money sink, the work lasting decades longer than expected. But - its a sunk cost, you would have to be a truly radical leader to be the nun who says "yes that spire we've been working on since the plague - fuck that thing lets leave it unfinished". So the spire is eventually, laboriously, completed, and then the convent has to cover the debt they incurred building it, which is an economic pressure on it from that day forth, and the convent gets much of its money from debts or rents which come along with its nuns as dowries, so they need to collect the debt to pay the debt.
Almost none of the nuns really know this is going on. Or at least they all "know" about it, in the same way you sort of "know" about the national debt, but they don't fully understand how much of their day to day life, the decisions of leadership, the structure of their lives, what they do and why and how they do it, is ultimately decided by this question of money and debt, a debt which many of them weren't around to incur and may not be around for when its paid off.
We know. And the Prioress's of the convent who can do accounting, and the more intelligent archbishops, all know, but the ladies in it are just in it.
Likewise, the business of managing the church, the simple logistics and accounting of it, the human management, the balancing of competency against utility against political necessity, which makes up the personal world of the Bishops and priests who periodically visit the convent, all of this, strangely, lead me to an odd sympathy with these worldly religious women and men. People of a church I don't belong to, and overwhelmingly concerned with the parts of that church which are not even about religion. The "other stuff", the maintenance and bureaucracy, and that hugely politically and morally compromised as well. There are no grand idealistic reformers, just people trying hard to stop things from going completely to shit, and making lots of compromised decisions in limited circumstances. The middle-level bureaucrats, my natural enemies!
How can it be that I am lead into sympathy with such people? Is it because I can see inside their minds and see how little they have to work with in the world, because I can see through time and unlike them know both their future and past, in a vague way, so know how difficult their meta-circumstances are?



THE STRANGENESS OF FAITH
How it passes back and forth around and within people like weather, forming differently in each one, provoked strangely and by unexpected events. The convent priest who isn't really a full priest, starts an affair with a lay sister, and its this which sparks him into actual, deep religion. Another has a complex drama with rare Italian music and lepers which alters his soul somehow. One sister fares poorly with the others, suffers deep depression and a total loss of meaning, then while praying to St Leonard, the saint of prisoners, the saint strikes her on the head and says "Go be an Anchoress!" This becomes her driving dream, and frees her from her depression and malaise. We, and the Priest, and the Prioress, know that almost certainly some other Nun just knocked her on the back of her head because she was irritating them - but the Priest rationalises it as being "essentially" the Saint. Later, long after the Nun in question has learned the truth and her dream of being an Anchoress has disappeared, another Nun becomes obsessed with it and begins to make it her driving cause, so the first nun has to work out whether, or how, to keep the secret of the knock on the back of the head.

THE MYSTERY OF PROMOTION - FATE IS INEXORABLE
Every Prioress earnestly wishes to arrange for some sane and capable successor, to manage the accounts and generally keep things calm between the nuns, (and hopefully to be pretty faithful).
This almost never happens. One appointed successor dies strangely in a spire-based accident/possible suicide. One nun is appointed to the role because nobody thought she would get it, felt bad for her, and so voted for her out of pity so she didn't end up with zero votes. Along with a split vote this put her 1 vote ahead and bam, new prioress there you go.

PEOPLE NOT UNDERSTANDING EACH OTHER
Townsend-Warner is capable of a deep interiority (of the kind which, I, for instance, can't manage, especially about the normal or mundane texture of life’s drama). These fluid and deep dives from mind to mind, show us the point of view of one soul looking at another, how enmeshed they are in their own private worlds, even when together, how in some ways inexplicable they are to one another.
It’s in "Jokers-Third" Perspective. Giving us deep enough dives into each soul to show us what drives and moves them, more even than they themselves sometimes know, before flitting like a fly to observe their interactions with another person, with quite a different soul - and we know more about both than either, so their attempts to understand each other, and communicate, are sometimes tragic, or comic and sometimes accidentally-blessed.
this fits with the modernist structure of the book - small stories ending in the middle, others disappearing into nothing, low things becoming great and great becoming small.




MODERNISM AND FEMENISM
Don't know if I've written about this before but can't remember exactly so will assume that I haven't and say it again if I have. There's a strange unacknowledged alliance nascent between modernism and feminism. men, especially the type we tell stories about, tend to have more story-shaped lives; largely about one or two interest, with all of the activity dedicated towards that, big rises, deep falls etc. You can cut them down pretty strongly to fit them in a book or film and still retain the general shape and theme of the life.
Women’s lives tend to be more about a lot of little things, spread out more in time, built from a greater number of connections between and across difference schema of life and more about those connections. Less vertiginous ascents and hubris-driven falls. Less stark shape and so when you cut it down to make it art, harder to retain the sense of it. 
Modernism, or "cubist" fiction about women is one interesting response to it because you can build a whole from fragments, skipping across space, time and schema, without having to fight the structure of the text or piece. Though the only other one I can think of off hand is Greta Gerwigs 'Little Women'.




HOW I CAME TO LIKE IT, OR FELL UNDER ITS SPELL
I forgot most of the specifics of most of the nuns even while reading and have definitely forgotten their names now. For a book which it basically a web of nuns you would think that a bad thing, and certainly, the core action of the book; the domestic lives of nuns who can't even leave the convent much and their relationships - is not exactly high Patrick style. And added to that that it is deliberately non dramatic!
Where's the DRIVE!  Where's the TENSION!?
There isn't any, or isn't much, just small lives and usually small dramas as they are lived.
This is the key and that is that the book as a whole stayed with me, like a dream or a strange memory, a stone of endless fascination, which one can turn over again and again, with its unanswered questions.

Not to mention the particularity of the history, specificity of the landscapes, the clothing, the meals the animals, the villagers conversations about a legendary history of Viking raiders which must have taken place only a few hundred years ago - this book drew from a deep well of slowly-accumulated knowledge.

Perhaps it is the strangeness of its empathy, its refracted, sorrowful, slightly grieving and slightly impish empathy, for all these fractured, damaged souls in an unfair and uncertain world, none of whom really know what the hell they are doing, at least 50 per cent or more of which are honestly trying to do something like the right thing up to 50 per cent of the time, (which isn't bad really). And that combined with a view of their world and environment which is at once cold, clear, but without contempt or the verminous wrathful self-righteous loathing, or simple blank incomprehension to faith of lives other than their own which I associate with the worst parts of the left - usually their curse is that they gain the global systematic view but in return have to chip off a bit of their soul and throw it away, it’s rare to find someone who has both the mind of a systems analyst and also their heart in their chest.



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Published on October 18, 2021 06:26

October 8, 2021

Grisaille by George Santayana

 Still busy doing KS stuff so my apologies. Here is a little fragment of "Soliloquies in England" by George Santayana.


Grisaille

England is pre-eminently a land of atmosphere. A luminous haze permeates everywhere, softening distances, magnifying perspectives, transfiguring familiar objects, harmonizing the accidental, making beautiful things magical and ugly things picturesque. Road and pavement become wet mirrors, in which the fragments of this gross world are shattered, inverted, and transmuted into jewels, more appealing than precious stones to the poet, because they are insubstantial and must be loved without being possessed. Mists prolong the most sentimental and soothing of hours, the twilight, through the long summer evenings and the whole winter's day. In these country-sides so full of habitations and these towns so full of verdure, lamplight and twilight cross their rays; and the passers-by, mercifully wrapped alike in one crepuscular mantle, are reduced to unison and simplicity, as if sketched at one stroke by the hand of a master.

English landscape, if we think only of the land and the works of man upon it, is seldom on the grand scale. Charming, clement, and eminently habitable, it is almost too domestic, as if only home passions and caged souls could live there. But lift the eyes for a moment above the line of roofs or of tree-tops, and there the grandeur you miss on the earth is spread gloriously before you. The spirit of the atmosphere is not compelled, like the god of pantheism, to descend in order to exist, and wholly to diffuse itself amongst earthly objects. It exists absolutely in its own person as well, and enjoys in the sky, like a true deity, its separate life and being. There the veil of Maya, the heavenly Penelope, is being woven and rent perpetually, and the winds of destiny are always charmingly defeating their apparent intentions. Here is the playground of those early nebulous gods that had the bodies of giants and the minds of children.

In England the classic spectacle of thunderbolts and rainbows appears but seldom; such contrasts are too violent and definite for these tender skies. Here the conflict between light and darkness, like all other conflicts, ends in a compromise; cataclysms are rare, but revolution is perpetual. Everything lingers on and is modified; all is luminous and all is grey.

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Published on October 08, 2021 03:54

September 19, 2021

Space Filling Picture Post

Posting will be slow and/or bad for a while as I am working on integrating playtest feedback for Demon-Bone Sarcophagus so here are some photos of minis I have painted since the last time I showed you mini photos.


Kitbashed Hellbrute for my 'Agents of Bile'







Some pretty decent Lumineth though it was hard to get a good photo of them.

Conversely a pretty bad paint job I was able to get some good photos of them.

'Lord Tiger Claw' or 'Joe Exotic' of the Emperors Children




Some more Agents of Bile
Light of Eltherion


Spooky AdMech kitbash I might get around to painting one day













Some slavic-themed Vampire and Skeleton boys





Stormcast/Noise marine Kitbash. Again not a great paint job but I am quite proud of the bash

The Fabulous One himself with some kitbashed obliterators and a gift from a friend













And finally the latest of fabulous Bills creations, some Indomitus assault marines kit bashed into biohorrors with a colour scheme based on emergency vehicle hazard patterns
PEACE










Also this was meant to be my mums birthday present but SPANISH CUSTOMS WON'T FUCKING DELIVER IT!!!





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Published on September 19, 2021 12:49

September 16, 2021

Trailing Corposant 6 - Bottle Novels

So far we have dealt with the opening act of the Heresy, the catastrophe of Horus’ initial schemes, a character study on Fulgrim, another on the Lion and the Dark Angels in general, followed by alack-of-character study on the Alpha Legion

This brings us to Book Eight; Battle for the Abyss! A book legendary throughout the Heresy fandom as being a bit rubbish and, unusually, agreed to be so by almost everyone. 

But was it truly rubbish??? (Yes.) and what is quality anyway? 

In a vast and sprawling series made up of a crazed web of interconnected stories, a few stand out as being some combination of quite-to-pretty bad, and also in having very little to do with any other books. 

Now, this lack of connectedness is highly relativeto the rest of the series. Even the smallest Heresy story has some hooks and tendrils leading elsewhere, but these are more separate than most and often much more separate than the fandom desired. 

So, rather than looking at a particular character or Legion, lets look at a particular form and do a deep dive on the “bottle episodes” of the Horus Heresy. 

[In U.S. tv terminology a “Bottle Episode” is a term for an episode, usually in the mid-point of a series where they are trying to conserve budget for the more expensive later episodes. They do this by putting together a bunch of characters in a confined (and inexpensive) place and watching them do acting.]

 

 

 

What counts as a Bottle Novel?

I eyeballed it tbh BUT 


No Primarch Ping-Pong. 

A Primarch has arrived! Now they have left! A Primarch meets another Primarch! They fight! Both survive! 

The whole ‘Unremembered Empire’ arc on the eastern fringe is very meandery and has a lot of “bottle energy” but it still has a shitload of Primarchs bouncing around (literally in Vulkans case) so doesn’t count. (Though ‘Pharos’, below is a distaff part of that sequence, its extremebottleness gets it entry.) 

 

Not Part of an Arc

 

 (Relativeto the rest of the Heresy Series) 

 

Feels Like Accounting

 

“But what about the Mechanicum/Assassins/Imperial Army/the battle over here/how did Horus get there etc etc etc.”) 

Some things just have to happen for the story to go on. (Titandeath has Primarchs, is technically part of the ‘Horus Advances on Terra’ sequence and arguably has a huge effect on the war, but… it just has a lot of ‘bottle’ energy. It feels like accounting so it goes here for now.) 

 

Self-Nullifying plot 

We must resolve this TERRIFYING THREAT we just found out about. Ok we have done that, lets never mention it again. 

Like the movie of an anime series, a bottle novel should produce a major threat that no-one mentioned till now and have it defeated or taken off the board by the end of the story with the loss of no major characters, did it even happen?

 

 

Contained Stage 

Welcome to Planet X, where the adventure of X takes place in a book called ‘The Adventure of Planet X’, ok you are now leaving Planet X, have fun with the rest of the Heresy. 

Extra points if no-one goes to or thinks about this stage ever again. 

 

Lets look at our list; 

Battle for the Abyss by Ben CounterMechanicum by Graham McNeilNemesis by James SwallowThe Outcast Dead by Graham McNeilThe Damnation of Pythos by David AnnendalePharos by Guy HaleyTallarn by John FrenchTitandeath by Guy Haley again.

 

 

Battle for the Abyss – Ben Counter

August 2008

 


Almost the prototype of a ‘bottle episode’ for its grand ambitions, low quality and the glorious futility of its main plot. And perhaps also in being a bit more fun than you probably expected. 

Lorgar has secretly developed a super-mega extra-big ultra-star-destroyer, the Furious Abyss, and just before news of the Heresy arrives it sets sail for Calth to join in the super-betrayal there and make it a MEGA BETRAYAL! 

On the way the Abyss spotted by a small, isolated group of loyalists who, for whatever reason, can’t get a message to anyone and only have a handful of smaller ships, who set of in pursuit! It’s a rag-tag group of mismatched distaff Imperials vs the ultimate ship. Hunt the Bismark… in space! Plus to chase it they have to literally stare into (at) the Abyss, and it stares back! 

Some fun elements to this; 

Unlikely Allies! The Loyalists are Ultramarines, Space Wolves, World Eaters and a Thousand Son. In the paracosm they don’t yet know they are on different sides and in the written series these legions have not yet received their signature books. Everyone is slightly cheesy but that is far from the worst writing the Heresy has and its quite charming. 

The Mission is Doomed! The loyalists start to lose faith in what they are doing and cracks appear in their command structure as every irritates everyone else quite a lot. 

Backstabbing Word Bearers! In classic Chaos and also real-life ruling dynasty fashion, the Word Bearers end up waxing their best officers because they are perceived as potential threat to the guy in charge and so sent on suicide missions which they know are suicide but have to pretend to either not know or not care or else whats the point in even being a Word Bearer?. 

Turns out the mission was not doomed but wassuicide. Ship blow up, everyone die. 40k stories do get an extra kick when the doom is actual doom and not heroic doom. We get a little of that here, though the good guys so end up saving Macragge so everyones last stands actually did count. 

Good? No. 

Fun? Kinda? Honestly I quite enjoyed parts of this. 

Primarch Ping-Pong? None. 

Part of an Arc? A little. Abyssfeeds into the Betrayal-at-Calth arc and Lorgar and Angrons genocide holiday on the eastern fringe. Characters do refer to it later a little and in short stories and fragments some sort of military response is arranged to try to stop it happening again. 

Feels Like Accounting? Not at all. None of these people come from or lead to any other book. Abyss generates and resolves its own entirely new problem before disappearing. 

Self-Nullifying Plot? Oh hell yes. Almost the defacto example. 

Contained Stage? In a strange way, yes? Almost everything happened “in the depths of space”. There are only a handful of locations and all of the ships are gone by the end.

 

Farewell Ben Counter! 

One of the trio of writers selected to start off GW’s Biggest Series Ever, he wrote ‘Galaxy In Flames’, probably the least interesting of the opening books, but not terrible. After  The Furious Abyss he is not invited back. 

He joins our list of “Fallen Heresy Writers”, toll the Bell of Souls for; 

Mitchel Scanlon (Descent of Angels)

Ben Counter (Galaxy in Flames, Battle for the Abyss

(He’s written plenty of stuff for Black Library since, just no Heresy Stuff.) 

 


 

Mechanicum – Graham McNeil

December 2008

 


I barely remembered the details of this when I reviewed it the first time and now I still don’t remember. 

From that review;  [So, what happened with the Priests of Mars during the Heresy? Kind of everything and nothing really.

Mars schisms right away due to a cybernetic APOCALYPSE WAR. Martian baddies release scrapcode, a future super-virus full of Chaos-stuff, into the Martian Mainframe, and within about 5 minutes, literally, half the planet is aflame and millennia of hoarded knowledge is trashed. McNeill is really good at writing these mega-scenes of tragic knowledge-loss.

In the story this effectively takes Mars and the Mechanicum, off the board of the Heresy on a large scale. Which is boring but functional.

….

Their reasons for turning are some of the most interesting. Some don't like E-Money/Terra and think they should be leading humanity. Some just want to do research. FREEDOM BABY.

The big promise Chaos makes the Mechanicum is that they will take the leash off and let them do whatever they want. Artificial Intelligence, full-scale genetic fooling around, psychic dickery, the whole thing.

The whole question of what on earth happens to an A.I. exposed to chaos, or what they would even think of chaos, is only lightly grazed in in the setting*.] 

 

Good? Its Mid.

 

Fun? I don’t really remember. I don’t think so? Interesting maybe. 

Primarch Ping-Pong? Not that I remember.. 

Part of an Arc? Not really.. HOWEVER, there are a bunch of fragmentary stories about the Mechanicum/Adeptus Mechanicus as the war goes on, and many about the business on Mars as various loyalists dip in and out of that warzone. There is a good Space Marine short story about some techmarines in training who realise “something is up” as Mars slides into civil war, a fun Young Bellisarius Cawl story where he escapes from a turning-chaotic Dark Mechanicum facility and some good political bits as the Mechanicum isolated on Terra transform into the Adeptus Mechanicus. 

Feels Like Accounting? Absolutely and totally. “What happened to the Mechanicum?” Well read this to find out and every other Mechanicum section attached to every other expeditionary fleet just ended up siding with that fleet. There are other Mechanicum stories but I can think of none where the cogboys actually form a strong opposition to either their loyalist or traitor commanders. There is not much Mars/Terra civil war in space stuff. 

Self-Nullifying Plot? Not quite. Mars remains a big fucking thorn in the side for the Imperium all through the Heresy and many stories are written about what they are going to do about it. The status and future of Mars also plays into mad shenanigans on Terra up to and during the Siege 

Contained Stage? Largely yes, it’s all about Mars.

 

*This is half-true. There are no evil chaos robot minds but there is an arguably-evil super-clockwork AI from the Dark Age of Technology which wants to destroy Chaos by, classically, wiping out mankind.

 

 

 

 

Nemesis – James Swallow

August 2010



I remember even less about this. Here are the highlights of the earlier review; [Why don't we just assassinate the enemy super-dude?" Asks everyone simultaneously.

So Malcador sends a shipload of space ninjas to take out Hourus and Maloghurst (Horus's Jaffir-style Grand Vizier), sends a super-demon to kill Big-E.

Both of these plans fail and once they catch wind of it, the Authorities on both sides nix any further assassination attempts.
….

There is a nice anime moment when someone tries to snipe a Primarch with a fucking huge gun the size of a building, which is also hidden in a building.]

 

Good? It’s very mid. 

Fun? It’s also very eh. 

Primarch Ping-Pong? Little bit of Dorn and Horus fails to turn up at the end. 

Part of an Arc? No but a single follow-up story is very good. The Sniper from this failed assassination attempt sneaks onboard the Vengeful Spirit, (which, as we have already discussed, tends to be pretty easy to get aboard), and decides to try to finish the job. Things do not go well. 

Feels Like Accounting? Very much so. 

Self-Nullifying Plot? Almost entirely. At the end of the book both sides simultaneously agree; “Lets not try assassination again, it is a silly thing”, and so they don’t.  Except they do a little bit but its hard to work out if Rus’s attempt on Horus with his magic spear is an actual intended killshot or just more theatre. The writers largely seem to have had a talk with each other and decided that both Horus and E-Money really want a face-to-face chat so Horus can cry and complain and kill his dad and so E-Dawg can [REDACTED]. 

Contained Stage? Honestly can’t remember.



The Outcast Dead – Graham McNeil

October 2011

 


Graham McNeil is back! And he has kinda forgotten the timeline!  

[A bunch of guys from Traitor legions were sent back to Terra to do the Captain America publicity thing, …  Now the Heresy is on they are in super-prison with rather mixed feelings. They were sent home largely before the corruption fully set in and so are not all chaosy themselves. But now Magnus has cracked a tube, they escape and are on the run. But to where?

There is a slightly silly future super-Samurai in this, and we get to meet maybe the last surviving Thunder Warrior who has been keeping it downlow in Terras criminal undercrust and hacking his own DNA to stay alive.

He's kind of a supervillan now but doesn't seem to hold it against Big-E?

Maybe he will turn up during the siege to do something. [He hasn’t so far!]

The only other thing I can remember about this is Magnus cracking the tube gives an Astropath another FUTURE VISION which he has to get to someone important. This is a thing which gets re-used much later in the Solar War.] 


Good? Mid. 

Fun? Loads! Himalayan mountain prisons! Samurai vs Space Wizard and World Eaters vs Thunder Warrior crime lord supervillain! 

Primarch Ping-Pong? No. 

Part of an Arc? Not really unless you count the “day-to-day-on-Terra” strand of stories an Arc. 

Feels Like Accounting? Voodoo accounting maybe, feels MENTAL. 

Self-Nullifying Plot? More like a what-the-fuck plot. Magnus’ message comes at the wrong time, the main character Kai Zulane get imprinted with a super-secret future vision of what happens on the Vengeful Spirit which everyone is after but in the end he meets the Emperor in a dream and E-Money says it’s cool I actually plan to die kinda actually? Like what? Think the Heresy writing team have decided to collectively forget about this one. Either it didn’t happen or if it did happen it didn’t happen at that time, in that way. 

Contained Stage? Arguably! Its Terra!


 

The Damnation of Pythos  - David Annandale

July 2014

 


[It's not bad. It’s a horror story. Evil wins and everyone involved is fated to be doomed no matter how hard they fight, which is more like how 40k actually would be probably.

We also get a good look at how traumatised and fucked up the Iron Hands are from their cybernetics addiction and dad-dying trauma.

The real characters in the Heresy aren't even the Primarchs but the Legions, these weird communities, multi-levelled, with a big crazy main personality, at the other end, lots of low-level, serfs effectively, or at least people who's only real option is to live inside a culture largely set by someone else, and distaff elements, mechanicuim, navigators (though we don't see much of them), and in the middle these ascended godboys. Super-malmukes who's character is shaped a little by the culture of their home a little by the genes of their space dad, a lot by the cumulative culture of the Legion. The culture of the Legion often has this interesting split in it, the Veterans are often from Terra, each chosen from different tribes, and a lot by their own choices (also by space-gods and psychic gene-magic).

Here the Iron Hands, Raven Guard and Salamanders rock up on a crazy jungle planet with a freaky artefact which they find out they can use to predict and observe enemy fleet movements, letting them launch highly effective space ambushes.

Unfortunately, because Astartes Know No Fear, they don’t watch Horror Movies, which means they don’t notice any of the blatant and intensifying horror movie beats happening on Pythos. The creep factor just keeps growing and growing and the split between the factions just keep intensifying.

And then everyone gets eaten by demons because the Ruinous powers not only predicted everything they would do but, in classic chaos fashion, actually relied on it.

Good Work Ruinous Powers, if only all your plans worked this well.

The writing is not perfect and it gets a bit daft towards the end, but this is a strong, grim book which stands out in the HH due to its tone and sense of identity..]

 

 

Good? Kinda? Grinding prose but interesting. 

Fun? Not at all, very very depressing. But fun in a way. 

Primarch Ping-Pong? None. 

Part of an Arc? Arguably yes, despite having few to no strong connections to most of the Heresy Pythos sits in a web of low-level plot webs which I will describe here;

 

The Shattered Legions Stuff 

What happened to the Iron Hands, Salamanders and Raven Guard who survived Istvaan but didn’t meet up with any Main Characters? Well they had their own mini-adventures by various different writers which vary hugely in quality but have a lot of potential. The Ravens, Salamanders and Hands really have almost nothing in common and the Iron Hands in particular are having an absolute fucking meltdown after Ferrus dies. Watching them all fail to communicate can make for some interesting stories. 

The Demons-Being Weird micro-arc 

The idea of Demons hanging out in the Warp and dicking each other about while visiting reality to fuck with people like Orca breaching, is an idea that never really comes up much. 

Lorgar visits Fulgrim in hell later in the series, in Fear To Tread we see some demons teaming up to try to corrupt Sanguinius, and in this story we see a demon prince – Madail, a perhaps ill-chosen name which doesn’t really feel scary or demonic, emerge on Pythos. He turns up again in ‘Ruinstorm’ also by Annendale and which has a fair amount of pretty-good demon madness.  

The Fun Times on Davin web of stories

There are quite a few stories set on and around Davin, the Horus-falling arc, this Pythos and Ruinstorm arc and a neat short story where Erebus goes there to learn spooky magic from a witch.

 

If a guy who looks like this asks if he can start a version of the Masons in your army.. just say no.

 

Feels Like Accounting? No. Literally no-one was asking “but what happened on Pythos”  

Self-Nullifying Plot? Nearly. The good guys die but the villain from this does go on to fuck with Sanguinius. I forget but I think maybe one of the dents put in him by the Iron Hands here helps out in that situation? 

Contained Stage? Almost perfectly so. It’s the Dammnation of Pythos which takes place on Pythos and in space a bit.


 

Pharos – Guy Haley

July 2015

 


A fresh read! (fresh listen really).

 

Robute is holding together his questionable Imperium Secundus on the Eastern Fringe using a creepy bit of xenos hypertech which he happened to dig up. Fragments of the Night Lords, (who survived Konrad getting his face pushed in by the Lion in one of the Forgeworld Red Books), find out about this glowing beacon in space and, without really understanding what it is, decide to take it. 

The Pharos is defended by its secrecy! Which it turns out is a terrible defence for a lighthouse! It’s also defended by Alexis Pollux, the guy who nearly killed Pertuabo at the Battle of Phall, loyalist Iron Warrior Barabas Dantioch, who also fucked with Pertuabos’ day, a handful of Ultramarines and the poor bloody infantry. 

A battle is on as the Ultramarines do Ultramarine stuff, Robute flips his lid trying to work out what to do, Pollux and Dantioch are best bros’ and the Night Lords, under pantomime-villain Gendor Skraivok, the ‘Painted Prince’ (he even sleeps on a bed!),  perhaps the first Space Marine to willingly pick up a demon blade, realise that despite being excellent creepy terrorists they are shit at siegecraft, especially vs an Imperial Fist AND an Iron Warrior working together, (maybe the first and last time that happens). 

Schemes will be schemed, last stands will be stood, the local populace will be skinned alive and the Pharos will be exploded, essentially ending Robutes Imperium Secundus and accidentally summoning the Tyranids. 

 

Good? High mid. Not an exceptional book but nothing to be ashamed of. 

Fun? Plenty! Haley writes a solid comic-booky 40k with decent character work and hissable villains. 

Primarch Ping-Pong? None, Robute is on his own for this one I think. 

Part of an Arc? Several! This forms part of the end of the Imperium Secundus arc. This incident, along with Konrad accidentally letting slip to the Lion that the Emperor is still alive, sends Sanguinius, Robute and the Lion on the path to terra. 

Alexis Pollux has his own deal and this story forma part of that. 

Barabas Dantioch has moved through a number of tales since his Primarch tried to kill him and here gets to finally die heroically. 

The planet Sotha will return in the 41stMillenium as the home of the Scythes of the Emperor chapter who have no idea why they have been set to watch over a giant spooky mountain (it’s the Pharos) or why their chapter symbol is a pair of Scythes (it’s a gesture of repsect towards the soldiers/agricultural workers of Sotha in ‘Pharos’ who died and suffered heroically to defend it from the Night Lords. 

Feels Like Accounting? Yes but not agonisingly so. The whole Imperium Secundus arc is rank with accounting and this is among the least offensive of the lot. 

Self-Nullifying Plot? Nope. 

Contained Stage? Largely yes. The battle for Sotha which takes place on Sotha. 

 

Hello Guy Haley! 

Its 2015 and Guy Haley has entered the Heresy. He will get three novels in the main series; Pharos, Wolfsbane and Titandeath, a Siege of Terra Novel; The Lost and the Damned, and three Primarch Books; for Konrad, Pertuabo and Corax. 

Haleys books don’t rise to the top of the series but they are defined by lively imagination and vivid characters. The shorter they are the better generally.

 


 

Tallarn – John French

August 2017



[Book opens with 99% of a worlds population dissolving and gets worse from there.

Pertuabo, still pissed from, pretty much everything that has even happened to him, is after another dang superweapon. This one seems to be a warp portal hidden beneath Tallarn, which presumably he hopes to use to repeat Horus' trick on Molech.

Oh and Pertuabo is dying it seems after that business with Fulgrim, and has an obsessive armour addiction.

Anyway he bio-nukes the surface of Tallarn and from that point on everyone has to roll around in tanks to get anything done.

Various factions run around in the bio-apocalyptic wasteland, including the Alpha Legion, who’s plans go about as well as accepted. [“expected” Patrick]

The book is really more a collection of pre-existing tales and the best of these are the early ones concentrating on the military and civilian survivors of the initial attack.

Tank Operas, it turns out, are really effective storytelling devices. A bunch of people with complex interdynamics, locked together in a hierarchy, which is in a steel box that makes up both their prison and only chance of survival, seeing the world outside through a series of lenses and blotchy screens, having to continually shout out to each other exactly what they see.

It has that Jane Austin effect of the strands of a complex social structure thrumming like the spokes of a web under pressure. A lie in a tank is much more interesting than a lie elsewhere and an annoying teenage locked together in an armoured compartment with you is much more dramatically interesting than in normal circumstances.

An interesting thing brought to the surface of this story, but which the entire HH is about, and because its soooo fucking huge and affects such a huge range of time, is something that only a saga the size of the HH could really look at in the same way - causes and consequences.

No-one on Tallarn has a full idea of exactly what they are fighting for. In a real sense, the survivors have already lost everything they care about. Most of the population and all of the biosphere is dead. They don't know why the enemy are still fucking about on the surface and their initial strikebacks are done almost purely out of spite.

Chance, fortune and slim luck brings more Imperial dudes, which makes it a war.

All Pertuabo cares about is finding his goddamn warp gate, but he can't tell anyone about it because if they find out what he's after they can stop him getting it.

The Alpha Legion proceed upon their usual dickery, playing everyone off against each other.

But in this story, the Alpha-Legion get Alpha-Legioned because, again, by chance, a top-level Cyberpunk Assassin happens to be on the planet and survives the attack and then starts duelling them in the information sphere.

People are fighting largely on instinct, in a war who's shape they can't see, towards unclear goals that keep shifting, and no-one knows what is really going on. The war ends when one of Pertuabos guys finds the gate, but loathing what it represents, blows himself, and the access tunnel up, hiding its location.

Pertuabo is out of time and gets brought to heel by Horus.

Ten Thousand years later we know that the culture effectively created by the attack and subsequent armour war, in which the entire remaining civilian population was essentially drafted and trained in armour tactics, creates an Imperial War World who's job is essentially pumping out tank regiments for the Imperium.

The Warp Gate goes un-used and is eventually discovered, and sealed by the Imperium.

So what did it all amount to? A bunch of mistakes and near-misses leading to an unexpected end. This book felt in its tonality and texture much more like 'real' history than most HH stories.]

 

Thank you Old Patrick, a solid analysis which I doubt I could beat here.

 

Good? Yes. Imperfect but it has stuck in my memory. The initial stories about the thrown-together tank crews in particular. 

Fun? Very, very sad. And slightly fun. 

Primarch Ping-Pong? No. Perty looms in the background, makes bad choices and gets and email from Horus. 

Part of an Arc? Arguably sits between the “Fulgrim Screws Perty” arc and the “Horus Gets His Shit Together” arc. 

Feels Like Accounting? Not really. Again, no-one was asking “But what happens on Tallern?” or “But how does Perty come back after being betrayed by Fulgrim?” 

Self-Nullifying Plot? Sort-of largely yes. The whole thing is provoked by a search for a Demon-Gate that almost none of the characters know about and which none of the major ones ever find. The Gate does turn up in the 41st Millennium though. 

Oddly that makes it a strange paring with ‘Pharos’, which also has a piece of creepy hypertech built into the planet and which also ends with the hypertech nullified until it crops up millenia later, the planets population bollocked and all the major players moving on. And like ‘Pharos’ it’s the introduction (in novel form at least) of a new Heresy writer who gets their own books later. 

Contained Stage? Aye, it’s the Battle of Tallarn which Happens on Tallarn.

 

 

Hello John French! 

John French a previous writer for the Dark Heresy RPG, which makes him I think the second ex-RPG writer on the Heresy (Dembski-Bowden did stuff for White Wolf, appropriately enough). 

French writes very solid books. Later he will bring the baddys together in ‘Slaves to Darkness’, get them to Terra in blinding fashion in ‘The Solar War’ and smash though the walls of the Imperial Palace in ‘Mortis’. 

Notably he also wrote the Ahriman Trilogy and ‘Athame’ one of the more interesting Heresy short stories. 

French is a little more serious in tone than Haley, if I had to think of a defining quality I would say.. structural innovation? The Ahriman books do TIME LOOPS in excellent fashion, ‘Athame’ is innovative, it doesn’t show up as much in his Heresy books, but I will have time to look deeper into French when we get to his books.




Titandeath – Guy Haley

December 2018

 


Another fresh listen. By god I remember very little of this book. Lets see.. 

To reach Terra Horus has to get through the Beta-Garmon system. Rogal knows this, but also doesn’t really think he can win there, plus he wants to concentrate on the Solar System and Imperial Palace. 

So Rogal just jams Beta Garmon with a shitload of Imperial assets, and throws in all the Titans he can spare knowing Horus will need to kill those Titans with his own to take the system and that a Titan War of that scale will wreck the planet, which he would rather happen here than on Terra. 

In a synthesis of the writers and fictional generals ablative accounting, this also works for the Heresy writing team to answer; “What happened to the Titan Legions?” = most of them die here. 

The book gets off to a storming start with a classic fantasy heroine accidently winning the horse race and being made a knight/fulfilling the prophecy except this time its founding a titan legion. Much of the rest of the book is told from this legions pov and .. its not bad in concept? But isn’t very interesting. 

Appropriately for Beta-Garmon the book itself is a little bit of a clusterfuck with a lot of not much. We get the lives and loves of a Titan legion plus Sanguinius and the Khan providing too little leadership too late.. In the end Horus develops demon-posessed Titans, feints the loyalists into a grinding Titan war by sacrificing all the Titans he also didn’t care about and does a sneaky strike on the astropahic choir, turning them into torture sauce and using the mess to make a mini-ruinstorm which his forces can navigate fine via demons but which Robute and the Lion will be massively slowed by. Essentially repeating the Calth/Ruinstorm gambit in miniature. 

I’m describing events, that’s most of what we have here. I don’t have a great synthesis for you. 

 

Good? No. 

Fun? No. 

Primarch Ping-Pong? Dibs and dabs, Sangy and the Khan bob about, Horus comes in for one scene and leaves. 

Part of an Arc? Only the “Horus Gets Very Slowly Closer To Terra” Arc, which we are still in really with the Siege of Terra books. THOUGH, some of the Titan characters turn up to die nobly in ‘Mortis’. 

Feels Like Accounting? Very much so. 

Self-Nullifying Plot? No, Horus wants something and he gets it. Though actually it feels like it has a self-nullifying plot even though it doesn’t. 

Contained Stage? Yes, it’s the Titandeath happens on Beta-Garmon 2 and 3, part of the Beta-Garmon system. 

Oh shit I forgot! The Machine God is real and exists in the warp! We find out at the end. A little dab of McNeil-style craziness there. 


 

What, if anything, have we learned? 

Bottle novels have been the cradle of two “finishing line” HH writers, and the grave of one. 

Story-of-planet is a solid book concept. Try to keep it largely on one world. Go hog wild with the planet , you may as well – what happened on Pythos, what happened on planet x, Throw in some hypertech, a demon gate, some unusual planet bullshit! 

Small wars work well. 

Life and energy can get you a long way, but won’t always be appreciated. 

THROW IN SOME RANDOM ALEX JONES SHIT AT THE END!! THE TYRANDIS ARE COMING! THE MACHINE GOD IS REAL! THE EMPEROR KNOWS HE’S GOING TO DIE!! 

A bad place for Primarchs – they don’t fit and aren’t fun, they work best hanging out with each other in the main-line books. The bottle novels are for “ordinary” people to live and die. 

Make it a downer, again, you may as well. 

Don’t forget StraaandSS of FAaaAAATE WWhhOOOooo! The Imperiums’ loss at Sotha helps to end Imperium Secundus and get the goodies to Terra, the futile defence of Tallern keeps Pertuabo from a Demon Gate, but also keeps the Traitors together.. the assassin sent to kill Horus ultimately gets corrupted by him (in a short story), the Demon awoken on Pythos gets a dent from the Iron Hands! And… whatever the fuck was happening in ‘Furious Abyss’ and ‘Titandeath’.

 

 .....

 

Peace out Bottle Novels, workhorses and under-appreciated guardsmen of the Horus Heresy Series. In times to come, men will remember not whether you lived or died, but that you stood.

 

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Published on September 16, 2021 13:13