Dark Imperium: Godblight review

 

Godblight by Guy Haley


    The Avenging Son walks the material realm once more and seeks to restore the might of the Imperium back amongst the great expanse of space. He has faced his brother Mortarion once already and pushed him back to the rotting garden of Iax as the forces of the Lord of Death seek to drag the realm of Ultramar into the warp itself. He has faced much, the forces of chaos lined against him and his sons, the new force of the Primaris marines dispersed through the galaxy to reinforce the beleaguered ranks of the firstborn marines. And now he must question the very nature of faith as the events of the previous book in the series weigh heavily on the returned Guilliman. He is destined to face his brother once more and this time the very fate of Ultramar rests on the outcome

    I enjoyed the previous books immensely. Seeing Guilliman return to the Imperium after his miraculous resurrection has been a highlight in the recent works from Games Workshop. To see this mighty being struggle with his return and this age where all his 'father's hopes for the Imperium of mankind have fallen to ruin. As so much knowledge has been lost and chaos has inflicted so much destruction upon the galaxy, it has been a great character study of the Primarch. He should be broken by the immensity of his task, of the weight of responsibility that he bears, and yet he marches on, a being of implacable will and utter conviction. It is at this time that he begins to question the nature of faith and if his Father could indeed be a God. He has to face the possibility, though he is reluctant to assign any validity to this possibility as it is merely theoretical, no proving factors have occurred to shape the Primarch's thought process at the time of the conversation. It is interesting to see Guilliman clash with Mathieu as the militant-apostolic is convinced that the Emperor is with them, that Guilliman's Father is directing all of this. This trans-human figure comes from a time when the Emperor sought to crush the very idea of Gods and religion, a time when the Emperor walked the Galaxy and interacted with his sons. Guilliman remembers a being that always insisted it was not a God and he now has to wrestle against an organization that recognizes the Emperor as such. All this whilst leading his crusade to push the forces of chaos and his fallen brother from his realm. 

    The writing is, as always with Guy Haley, especially good at times of combat. It remains tight and focused throughout with great attention to some of the more grotesque details of the fallen world and the effects of Nurgle upon those around its followers. I have enjoyed his portrayal of Guilliman, very much a man out of time, though man is not the correct word to describe the weapon that the Emperor had forged to fight his wars. We get a good hint at the events playing out beyond the Plague Wars, Nurgle moving his forces from this front as the other Chaos Gods begin to move against one another, Mortarion refusing to shift focus from his brother and his plans surrounding Ultramar. As the events of this battlefield play out we get hints and more about what is to come next in the lore surrounding Warhammer 40k, though one particular play by the forces of Nurgle I saw staggering over the hill, it was not the most subtle of nods to that which has been but it will be interesting to see how they implement it. I look forward to more after the conclusion to this book and I have confidence that it will be told well. Guy Haley is a talented author and has handled this trilogy wonderfully.

    So all in all I would rate this a 4 out of 5. There are a few niggly issues around pacing, for me at least, but for the most part, the story unfolds well. I would recommend any fan of Sci-fi to give this a look and any Warhammer 40k fan should most definitely seek this book out. Until next time, folks.

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