"Does he always mutter 'blood for the blood god?'"
"No he's stopped, see?"
*silence as they travel along the path*
"... blood for the blood god, blood..."
"Your meant to be able to tell the future..."
Archaon: Everchosen is one of those novels that really seems like a 'nothing read' to begin with. It labours at the start, nothing much happens for the first thirty pages, then all of a sudden your shoved into the passenger seat where the driver is doing hundred down the motorway and there's no chance of jumping out. BOOM
This book is filled with insane battles and lovingly tendered complex characters who spring from all corners of the Warhammer world. You've Dark Elves who like to indulge in a bit of moody-sex-club-type frolics. Beastman who are just how they sound. Warped deigns of Chaos, warbands of varying types and amongst all this we've Archaon, who is forging his own path, taking the power of Chaos for himself, where he will lead the world into the End Of Times. Everyone else is just a choirboy to him! He may have been if he stayed as a Sigmar-loving young templar he was. His fall from grace from the light to the darkness is part of the story that was so well written, you can visualize him turning piece-by-piece as his path takes him from the Empire to the Northern Wastes and eventually Naggorth.
The core of the story in Everchosen covers events from Archaon's life prior to becoming the Chaos warrior, then follows his fall and a type of Hercules-labours, whereupon he has to discover six treasures of Chaos. The first being The Altar Of ULTIMATE DARKNESS (who the hell comes up with such cliché names!). Archaon knows of his fall from grace early on, he tried to get Father Dagobert to help him understand and decipher a old tome, that apparently records the future of The Everchosen.
Some of the characters and personalities Archie comes across during his journey are brilliant - you've Mother Fecund who worships Nurgle and seems to churn out 'clone' type plague-ridden meandering walkers. The Swords of Chaos (sentinel Chaos warriors who are charged to protect Archaon - charged by whom? We don't know) appear early on in the novel, when Archaon is trying to figure out his path with the help of the worldly Father Dagobert and Giselle, who are both central to the characters development. My favourite side-character was The Great Spleen, a ogre who worships the blood god. He gives us some gory action, certainly in the final half of the book. There are so many more I could mention, but I'll end with the Dark Elves Dravin Vayne and his warlock lover Sularii who is a bit of a manipulative biatch - always caressing the male form... filthy wench!
I wanted to talk about the pacing of the novel, it's rather odd from the outset. However, rather than a bad thing, it happens to make the novel exciting in the sense that it keeps you guessing what's going to happen next. From Archaon's childhood, to his time spent growing up under the tutelage of Father Dagobert. As a reader you get to experience Archaon's fall from being a book-loving child, to a entity that decides to bludgeon his way through anything or anyone who stands in his way. The bludgeoning part does grate after awhile, there's no real challenge for Archaon as a warrior - this is where Father Dagobert helps to counsel Archaon that a warrior uses both his mind and muscles to fight. Sometimes you need to think before acting, where other's you act without thinking.
I've got to throw praise on Rob Sanders as he seems to have this innate ability to show Chaos as a entity rather than a singular force. He seems to flesh out Chaos as a parasitic sadistic bastard, and I doubt he is far wrong. The whole insanity and corruptibility of Chaos are shown throughout Archaon's fall and what helps you feel Chaos is more than a whisper by a madman are the brilliant side-characters I keep on harping about. They are many and as many they show different characteristics that the four gods of Chaos can afflict on a person. The Dark Elves worship the prince of pleasure Slannash (debauchery and indulgence - what's her number??). Spleen's taking of skulls for the blood god. Mother Fecund maggot-men which she spews out as worship to Nurgle. Later the god of change entities show their face, but if I mention who and why, it's going to spoil a part of the story for you. To give them all balance, Archaon is aware that Chaos corrupts and uses humanity as a play-thing, so he decides to say no to all four gods of Chaos. He will take from them. He will use their power. He will not be cowed unlike the weak, his followers.
The ending was great, it left me thirsty for more! Sadly I'm not sure if there are going to be any more books about Archaon, I hope so. Apparently Everchosen isn't a book you should read unless you have some prior knowledge of the Warhammer world. I'd disagree with this, you've a map on the inlay - the story tells itself and gives the reader explanations that (I would argue) would allow this novel to standalone. In fact if you took out the Warhammer canon, I'd say this novel was potentially one of the best fantasy stories I've read since Prince Of Thorns. Enjoy.