It's always the story that punches you in the gut that you enjoy most. You weren't looking for it, but there it is, rocking your world, sucking the air from your lungs.
That's how I feel about Robert Rath's Bleedout.* Gut-punch story with grab-you-by-the-throat writing. I read this bad girl in two long breaths. I couldn't put her down.
*(I could go on at length about each story in this collection. Except mine, probably. Bad form, yeah? Yet since Bleedout is the lead and also a novella amongst several shorts, I thought I'd focus on this.)
What first struck me is that Bleedout's level of verisimilitude is unreal. I've served in a combat zone, and while I've never campaigned against the T'au or extracted a Militarum general in a hot LZ, Rath gets all the details right. I kept asking myself, 'Has this guy been in combat?' He just gets it all right. And the medical scenes – frankly the tensest in this tightly plotted thriller – felt like listening to Navy Corpsmen when they tried to teach me anything more complex than treating sucking chest wounds or applying tourniquets. Yeah, verisimilitude.
Next up, the writing. The brevity of Robert's writing and chapters is just knockout. The story really chugs along. That works for 20,000 words – like I said, I couldn't put her down.
Finally, the big question. I always walk up to 40k/AoS stories asking myself, 'how does this fit into the greater setting?'
I think we're all still developing a feel for Varangantua. The setting's still a little inchoate and quite diversified. With each release, Black Library breathes a whole lotta life into the city, but I'm still sort of connecting the dots. Which, speaking as a fan, is quite the pastime.
Sometimes I forgot Bleedout was set in 40k. But that ain't a bad thing – no, quite the opposite. I love Robert's vision of Varangantua. The fact that it defied my expectations probably added to that gut-punch effect, the story I wasn't looking for. Bleedout has that same quality you'll see in the settings of, say, Eisenhorn stories. That freshness.
All in all, Bleedout's a great read, cathartic, the kind of story that cleans you out for a day. I look forward to digging into Robert's future Crime stories – maybe a novel? :)
Those are my notes on Bleedout. But you know what the best part is?
After Bleedout, there are still six more shorts – and they are all quite good.*
*(Yeah, maybe I like my story too! So what?)