Damn it, it's so lip-smackingly grimdark.
On that note I just finished
Ahriman: Unchanged, the end of the Ahriman Trilogy.
Honestly I don't know what to think about the whole series. Maybe I'm not dialed in enough to the subtlety or depth it was written with. (I think going straight from the Horus Heresy novels to this trilogy would help as many of the same Thousand Sons characters reappear.)
But it all seemed so self-servingly "arcane." Half the series probably is about what psykers see and how they communicate and what the internal life of magic is. But none of it was really interesting. Colors and forms, obvious metaphors, the execution was adequate without being novel and it just kind goes on and on and on....Because it's a series about Chaos Sorcerers and Tzeentch, the twist ending is such a complete pretzel you can't honestly say what it meant just on a casual first reading. And Ahriman....the way he's written he needs a picture done in
bishounen style with a wrist over his forehead and a rose held outstretched in the other hand. Ironic given my complaints about my gaming group but damn this shit was angsty. I started to dread all the parts where half the books' casts are:
Beings inside Ahriman's psyche enacting his own internal questioning and search for answers.
You like dream-vision-quest type literature? Half the series is nothing but that.
I'm glad I own the books because, you know, Thousand Sons rule. I just think the author went straight at tropes and then repeated them for three books. I did enjoy the depictions of the Planet of Sorcerers though.
Now I'm reading
I Am Slaughter by Dan Abnett and it's not his finest work either. It's set after the Heresy well before the 41st millennium. And it's got to be the bluntest writing from Abnett I've read. The overall plot arcs are still his, really detailed so you get a sense of the enemy, pretty good scene setting. But he's dropping lots of tough sounding one liners to punctuate things (he title drops the book within two chapters) that don't really work and the story is split between Space Marine action and Terran high politics, showing how one is impacting the other. I won't finish it for a while and maybe I'm still sour coming off of
Ahriman....but so far it hasn't grabbed me like his
Gaunt or
Eisenhorn or
Heresy stories. It's still Abnett but several parts seem kinda phoned in. I didn't realize I wanted to know about the post-Heresy years until the book was set in it but....so far he's not delivering on it very much other than to describe the state of Imperial politics. Things actually sound almost boring and normal in the Imperium during this time. (I think it's M32 or M33.) It doesn't help how several characters in the book talk or think about how bored they are with the current state of things.