I recommend the Ciaphus Cain series. Cain is one of the most relatable protagonists in 40k and the humorous tone serves to ease you into the grim darkness of the setting. Plus many books are good introductions into factions like the tau, neurons and chaos.
I've only read the first Cain book but I plan on doing a few more soon. I dig the guy precisely because he's so un-40k. It makes the setting a bit easier to swallow at times coz the tone is actually fun. Not that 40k books need to or should be fun and irreverent at all times but it's a nice change of pace.
Helsreach was my introduction, which starts off with Grimaldus saying "I'm gong to die on this world." He has absolute contempt for the humans he's supposed to be protecting and he has a hissy fit when he learns he's stuck defending this stupid hive city instead of gloriously dying in space. And you learn what servitors are...it's all so awful it's kind of funny. Very entertaining.
@@razmere924 it is one of the BETER written stories for 40k which is not saying much.. the audio book is what was used for the animation of the series. is fantastic. I have yet to find anything better in ALL the 40k books out there..
@@razmere924 For me Grimaldus showed disgust and admiration for humans equally throughout the book, with admiration winning out at the end. He never really understood them though. Their desires, motivations and behaviours were largely a mystery to him.
If folks are interested in Chaos Space Marines, I might recommend the Night Lords trilogy. It's a bit of a different kind of Chaos Legion, as they're only _partly_ invested in this whole Chaos business. Which actually gives you a good mix of character perspectives, as the Night Lords we follow are a mix of some Chaos worshipers and mostly just standard Night Lords. Which is to say, a bunch of bastards who were bastards even before the Heresy. Now that the Heresy (and their Primarch, Conrad Kurze) have come and gone, they're really bitter about the whole thing. The group shown in the trilogy are also underdogs, which is a different angle than is usually shown with Chaos Space Marines. They're a company barely limping along, their numbers dwindling due to attrition, accidents, and infighting. Night Lords especially can be difficult to sympathize with (remember, they're the ones that mostly don't have Chaos as an excuse for how evil they are), but making them underdogs helps with this. You're left wanting to see them pull through, even if you might not necessarily want them to win. Then again, part of the arc of the novels is the group (and specifically its main character, Talos) learning to not just survive, but grasp victory for the first time in millennia.
In the same vein, the Black Legion series by the same author is also really good. I think overall I like the Night Lords trilogy better because you get a bunch of viewpoint characters vs a single solitary protagonist (also why I prefer Ravenor over Eisenhorn) but if you've already read Night Lords and want more, Black Legion might be for you.
The Night Lords trilogy was my starting point, and a very understated point is that they are fucking AWESOME. Some of the best action sequences in a book I've read! Seriously if you want really good combat those books are for you
Dan Abnett’s “Titanicus” is an EXCELLENT introduction to the Adeptus Mechanicus and the Titan Legions, and is also part of the broader Sabbat War series that Gauntms Ghosts takes place in. A very good new reader friendly series is also Andy Hoare’s “Kingsblade/Knightsblade” which actually reads as a Young Adult novel, and is a very good introduction to Imperial Knights while also touching on the Astra Militarum, Inquisition, Orks and Chaos. The best Space Marine introduction book is from the Space Marine battles series, “Rynn’s World” by Steve Parker. That book shows you the entire structure of an Astartes chapter in relation to its mortal serfs and imperial population while also showcasing how dangerous Orks can be.
My introduction was William King's Space Wolf series, then Eisenhorn's trilogy, and then first 5 volumes of Horus Heresy. Random as it might seem, it gave me a good sense of the scale, an overlook on current affairs, and on 'what went wrong' part of the entire story. From there I'd say it's 'choose your own adventure' kind of thing. For me it was Gaunt's Ghosts series, and I've been keeping my straight silver close ever since :)
I started with Space Wolf (and followed with Eisenhorn) myself, and I’d say that’s the best possible opening. Space Wolf helped me understand how space marines are made and offered an interesting perspective of someone who goes through the process from the very beginning, while Eisenhorn does a brillant job at introducing the reader to the politics and social structure of the Imperium.
The Infinite and The Divine is just so good, it's about damn time we had some good Necron novels, and it makes a fantastic companion to The Twice Dead King which has me really impressed so far.
@@joshuafarrington3649 id argue Twice Dead King is a great start for people interested in necrons, it lays out who they are and how they function while also introducing the imperium from the xenos perspective
@@joshuafarrington3649I started with The Infinite and the Divine, and besides the beginning where I was confused what shuriken pistols and the eldari dinosaur things were, the book does a really good job explaining everything else for newcomers, likely because Black Library expects this to be a readers first necron book
Particularly I recommend starting with short stories collections. They are fun and quick ways to get to know the 40K environment, practices, believes and diversity of factions and races.
I always use the Ciaphas Cain series to ease people in to the setting as really easy to sell it to non-fans "It's Blackadder in space" and personally I think the series does a great job of easing you into the craziness of the setting (I started with Horus Rising and went from there - talk about in at the deep end HaHaHa)
@@Roboute727 Aye, and as it goes through the series you meet many of the different factions (Orks, Necrons, Genestealers/'nids, Chaos - I don't think he's met Aeldari yet) and get a nice, simple explination of them and what they're like. It's a cracking jumping on point
Yeah, after reading Eisenhorn trilogy and some 8-9 books from Horus heresy I thought that in grim darkness of far future comedy and humor have been dead for thousands of years. And then Ciaphas Cain series came along. The stark contrast just shocked me. In a good way.
Thank you so much! I have just started reading the Horus Heresy and was trying to find all stories pertaining to the Ultramarines. This video is extremely helpful!!! Thank you for the time and effort you put into this!
The Great work does a huge amount of fleshing out for Cawl, plus some really cool stuff goes down :D The Infinite and the Divine is probably my favourite GW book (And ive read most of them) just... top work!
Couldn’t find Eisenhorn at the bookstore, so I walked out with MARK OF FAITH, a Sororitas novel, and it’s surprisingly very good! I’m about halfway through so far but it’s not only setting up two intricately woven protagonists, but it also really captures the inner truth of what it means to be a battle sister guided by faith in something you can’t communicate with
I started with the Black Legion series (Talon of Horus) since I'm a big chaos fan (base knowledge of 40k, but never read the books before that) and it was the BEST starting point imo. I LOVE ADB and he's by far my favorite WH author even after reading many others
Thank you for writing my comment for me. Well, I was 2 decades and about 50 novels into WH40K by the time I read them, but good to hear that my judgement wasn't totally clouded :D
My personal favorite book from Black Library is The Infinite and The Divine. It’s a wonderful introduction to Trazyn, and Orikahn, a look into Necron Society, and gives people an understanding that the Necrons aren’t just “Soulless Terminators In Space”… which… they are- but they have wants, and personalities all their own.
My intro to WH40k was the Fire Warrior book (based on the bad game). It was a great place to start because the main POV character was part of an alien race that was relatively new to the WH40k universe. Plus it was a fun pulpy action book
I'd recommend Ahriman: The Exile and Ahriman: Sorcerer for those interested in the Thousand Sons at all. It's probably the most sympathetic portrayal of the Chaos side I have ever seen to the point it might make heretics out of people. I know there are a lot of interest in the Thousand Sons right now because Rubric Marines have been selling out all over the damn place. If you're going to build an army of dusty Egyptian sorcerers, you might as well get to know the best one there is, Ahriman the Bad Ass.
I really appreciate the recommendation for Spears of the Emperor. Not being the biggest fan of space marines it wasn't on my radar at all but I got the audiobook and really enjoyed it.
For me the best starters outside the first five horus heresy books are: Inquisitor by Dan Abnett Ciaphas Cain by Sandy Mitchell Gaunt’s Ghosts by Dan Abnett Ultramarines by Graham McNeill Iron Warriors by Graham McNeill
Excellent reccomendations, really glad to see the Shira Calpurnia trilogy in there - often overlooked but it does a fantastic job of illustrating the world of 40K and how it actually works in a civilian setting. In the grim darkness of the far future there may only be war but in order to fuel that the economy has to keep rolling.
that has always been the parts of the 40K universe I have found most interesting, the moments when you get a peek at what civilian life is like in such a place - looks like the Calpurnia trilogy is something I would love reading
If you want to get into space marines, the ultramarines/ iron warriors omnibus is a nice introduction, since you get a taste of the large scale conflicts, but even more small missions, driven by character. Also it’s interesting to see so many parts of the lore and the conflict explored (from both sides)
I started with Ian Watson's Space Marine published by boxtree. Never knew about GW but started getting white dwarf the month after. Went to a very interesting talk with Ian Watson a few years after that. (Edited to change Livingston to Watson. I got my Ians mixed up)
Ian Watson wrote Space Marine (and the Inquisiton trilogy), those four were the first novels I read about 40K. they are a bit janky by today's standards, but i liked them.
@@tigerstein I agree the Inquisition ones are utterly bonkers however Space Marine like other books from that period (Drachenfels or Beasts in Velvet for two other examples) are miles better than many of today's efforts. Mainly as back then you were guaranteed an actual author rather than someone promoted in house who after writing rules was convinced that they could just as well with actual novels and were then willing to churn them out regardless of quality *cough*Gav Thorpe*cough*.
As a faithful servant of the dark Gods I would also like to recommend some books from the chaos point of view: Talon of Horus and Black legion(great if you want to learn about the origins of the black legion, also might change your opinion on Abaddon since he has been memed to death by the community) Lords of silence (hey, just because you are a disgusting and mutated monstrosity doesn't mean you can't have life goals) The night lords trilogy (just because we skin people alive doesn't mean we are all bad!) honorable mentions to the Fabius Bile and Ahriman trilogies. I have not read them my self, but I have heard nothing but praise!
The Gaunts Ghosts series is a good start. Also, its weird how people forget that the Halo Scar pretty much started disappearing after the events of the Priests of Mars series and the Kotov/Telok expedition
what happened to Caiphas Cain!! ok, there are pros and cons to the writing style, but all in all, very light hearted, funny, and good at introducing the different inhabitants of the universe :)
For people who are loosely acquainted with 40k lore, but wanna know what's happening right now, I'd recommend Shroud of Night. It is one of the few Alpha Legion books, with, while not deep, likable legionaries, and it has cameos from notable players like Celestine and Kharn, as well as an intro to Primaris, as well as how the Heretic Marines and Firstborn Marines react to them.
Although I'm not completely new to Warhammer 40k, I was there in 1990, but other than picking up some of the world building through the game and reading Rogue Trader cover to cover this was some time ago and I've not really 'kept in touch'. So, this is incredibly helpful, many thanks.
I started my journey into the Black Library with the stories of Uriel Ventris in the Ultramarines Omnibus. Even if you're not the biggest fan of the Ultramarines, its a good series of books and it's been a go to for me when recommending starting points for 40k.
I started listening to Nightbringer after watching Arch video about how Chaos recruit/make more space marines and he recommended Dead Sky, Black Sun so I thought that starting with Nightbringer would be a good start and I enjoyed it, looking forward to listening to the rest of the series.
Thanks for the recommendations I've dipped in and out of warhammer 40k novels for years mostly books in the Horus Heresy era so I've just used this month's Audible token on Dan Annetts Necropolis as I love to hear what life is like for normal working folk in the warhammer universe
The Gaunts Ghosts series are amazing and the best series from my perspective. The entire Sabbat World setting is great och very nicely detailed. You truly feel how powerful how both loyal and traitor Astartes are compared to normal soldiers and the battles are told in a very detailed and vivid way. The characters are great and as in game of thrones no one is safe..
My first books were Ian Watson's novels, and after those the Gaunt's Ghosts series. But my first introduction to Warhammer 40k was the first Dawn of War game.
I love that there are so many short stories. I just barely got into warhammer and my first read is ghazghkull thraka by nate crowley. I'm loving how it's told so far. I'm so hyped to get into it and kind of like that I have so many options to go from here.
I honestly think the tau’s farsight series is also a good intro to the universe. The tau whilst alien, have a view of the world that’s closer to a modern human’s understanding of the world. It gives you a great outsider view of the 40k universe as the characters in it are slowly being confronted with the horrors of said universe and having to try and understand it.
I just bought the Enforcer omnibus, so glad to see that spoken of highly here! I'd suggest the Forges of Mars trilogy as well, especially if you love the Cog Boys or weird xenos stuff, as it features many branches of the Admech and Imperium, but has Eldar, Hrud, Orks, Rogue Traders and a whole load of other good stuff in there.
I loved Ian Watson’s Inquisitor book. I think that was the first WH40k novel, though I could be wrong. I liked the idea that the genius emperor could keep secrets from himself thanks to a dissociative identity condition.
Great video! I’m currently wrapping up halo series this month. Think I’m going to read some Star Wars for a few months and jump into 40k. I couldn’t get into the games but might be able to for the books
I read the spears of the emperor by your recommendation, first ever WH40k book, and what a book man super good can't wait to jump on the other books now
I had played 40k back in the Second Edition days, so my introduction to the lore was the short pieces of fiction found in the various Codex and Rule books, but it wasn't until a co-worker of mine (who actively played/painted/collected for the tabletop game) told me about the novels that I got actively interested in reading. He suggested I start with the Imperial Guard books, because they're the most easily relatable faction (being mostly human and just ordinary people as opposed to genetically-modified supermen), and he couldn't have been more on the money. "Rebel Winter", "Fifteen Hours", "Death World", and "Gunheads" were my introduction, and from there, I just kept rolling. :)
I've read a bunch of 40k novels and I still think that Space Wolf is my favorite so far. It's pretty simple all about one guy's training but it does a really effective job building the setting.
Great vid, I've only just started reading 40k books. I started with The Emperors Gift by Aaron Dembski-Bowden because I like Grey Knights and there's not much written about them. I'm currently enjoying the Eisenhorn books and although I've already got some others queued up I'll take a look at some of your recommendations too.
Great review, and some very solid advices (Eisenhorn/Ravenor and Gaunt's Ghosts series are very good sci fi series in their own rights). I'm a bit disapointed that you didn't mention the Beast series also. Granted, the time setting is a bit off if you are considering only the 40-41K timeline, but it has the advantage of blending in politics at different levels, well developped human characters, space marine characters that actually have something more than only war on their mind, and really frightening xenos.
I enjoyed the series, but I do think they padded it out near the end. But the main reason I didn't include that or the Heresy was that those series are way better if you already know the 40k setting, because then you get all the Easter eggs and origin story reveals!
Ok, SO: I've been watching 40k vids for a while; I dig it, and I dig scifi, grimdark, expansive settings, etc, so 40k may be something I could get into, but there is SO much out there! I (think that I) know the timeline, factions, major characters, etc... I've seen this vid, but I'd like input from fans as well as content creators (who are also fans, but...) Reccomendations?
As for us Eldar players, I would very much recommend both the Path of the Eldar and Path of the Dark Eldar trilogies. And the related Mask of Vyle, a Harlequin/Dark Eldar book. Also I did like both Ynnari books, shame these did not sell well. Both Phoenix Lords books (Asurmen and Jain Zar) I've got mixed feelings. On one hand, they were ok, but I somehow did not imagine the Fall and the start of the whole Path system, as described. Also, why there are only two? I need my Dark Phoenix story and finally know, what exactly happened!
They are all great recommendations. Personally I loved Mask of Vyle most but you need both the Eldar and Dark Eldar trilogy to appreciate it. For the Phoenix Lords books I found Jain Zar really good but Asurmen was kind of a let down but still a good read.
I just started really getting into reading scifi/fantasy novels like Blindsight, Hyperion, Three Body Problem, and have been a World of Warcraft fanatic since 2004 and I always come across 40k shorts and clips and lore clips and the series as a whole seems so awesome and rich with lore and stories and I have absolutely no idea how to start getting into the books lol.
My suggestion is to start with whatever topic interests you. I know there are classics, but I don't consider them as much required reading as solid recommendations. Personally, I'm scrounging for information about the Thunder Warriors. So I'm working my way through the cited sources on their wiki pages.
Great list. I only started reading 40k about two years ago. I agree that the first Dawn of Fire book Avenging Son is a good jumping on point for the universe. A large part of the story takes place on Terra so you get some good human perspectives of those that work within the insane bureaucracy of the Imperium. There's a subplot with an inquisitor and lots of other snapshots of the universe as a whole. I think novel Dante is a good introduction to Space marines. It is an origin story about a human's path to becoming a space marine. Definitely worth a read. After Dante, the second book, The Devastation of Baal is pretty much everything I'd want out a 40K war story. It is epic. So you have somewhere to go next if you like the first book.
The book that was recommended to me as a start was The Bloodied Rose by Danie Ware. Follows a squad of Sisters of Battle and I really enjoyed it! I found it was a very smooth entry into that faction.
I started at the Eisenhorn series. I watched alot of lore videos 1st so i understood some things beforehand. I did the Ravanor books next, most of Cain books, and 1st 4 Horus Heresy books. The Ravanor books surprised me when they encountered tyranid gaunts and didnt know what they were. It was a time travel thing and it was stated that they would be a threat in 300 years. Didnt realize till then that those books were that far back of current timeline of 40k.
I'm a lapsed gamer from the 90's who still enjoys the lore and have just stumbled across your channel. Must say; LOVE the unapologetic antifascist bent; SO refreshing to hear nowadays. Your videos are well presented and informative too. All power and continued success to your arm.
Night Lords Trilogy is probably one of the best in the wh40k setting. It is really engaging considering that the books protagonists are a bunch of ruthless murderers.
Ruthless murderers is an understatement, we kinda forget as we get attached to them, but they are the worst of the fucking worst. It's the second act of Voidstalker that really hammers that in.
@@KillyBilly141bro, I’m planning on getting the first three Horus Heresy books, The First Heretic, Space Wolf omnibus 1&2 and the Night Lords omnibus (maybe even Gaunts Ghost), does that sound like a decent lil collection of books?
In my opinion double eagle by dan Abnett is probably the best book for beginners for a few reasons, it’s a brilliant book, probably the best black Library book I’ve read. Its a single, self contained, story, so requires no prior knowledge of the setting or reading a huge series to see how it ends, but at the same time ties into the Gaunt’s ghosts book, leaving an opportunity to delve deeper into black library for the context behind the war. Its whole ‘Battle of Britain but in space’ thing makes it easy to understand what’s going on for non 40K fans, and it has a great cast of memorable and relatable characters, that shows a great mix of military and civilian life in the 41st millennium
I can second the Wrath of Iron recommendation. It's a great book about the Iron hands, excellently written, maybe my favourite Imperium book. It questions whether the pain the Imperium puts humanity through is even justified by its survival.
I don't play the game, but I do like the lore and the stories within it. Thanks to your recommendation, I started with the fantastic Eisenhorn Trilogy (or quadrology now?), and of course that lead me to the Ravenor and Bequin spin offs (If you see Dan, tell him to hurry up and finish Pandemonium). As a minor point, and probably utterly irrelevant for a video that's 2½ years old, but in the Chapters section, you have the Eisenhorn trilogy down as The Eisenhower Trilogy.
I started with the space wolves omnibus. I found it was a good starting point because it starts from a human’s point of view and then changes gradually as he is transformed into a space wolf
Currently enjoying The Lords of Silence by Chris Wraight. It's an interesting spin on the life and slow decay of a warband of the Death Guard, although it does seem to jump around a bit within it's own timeline, which can be a tad confusing at first. Definitely NOT a "where to start" kind of book though, but worth a look if you are already embedded into the world of 40K.
I would highly recommend ‘The Path of’ series for Aeldari point of view …. three books - Path of the Warrior - Path of the Farseer & Path of the Outcast. Excellent series and really good to provide the counter point to humanity 😊
Hey great vid. Im an Imperium fan. but just curious where to start when it comes what led up to the Indomitus crusade. then to current. Do i do start the Fall of Cadia series? Then Dawn of Fire to Dark Imperium?
Hmmm difficult. Fall of cadia is just one book and it tells that story, but then stops there and nobody from that book turns up again. Then you have the Watchers of the Throne (first actual era Indomitus series, Guilliman arrives at terra, politics change), Dawn of Fire (the Indomitus Crusade sets out) and Dark Imperium (12 years later and Guilliman is kinda making peace with being holy imperial jesus) The really important bit (Guilliman resurrected by Cawl, Yvraine and Celestine) isn't novelised. It's in a campaign book, Gathering Storm, on Warhammer vaukt
LOVE Ghazkull Prophet of da waagh, Brutal Kunnin, Da Big Dakka, Warboss, Son of the Forest, Infinite & Divine, First and Only (didnt do the omnibus, just the first to try out the series), and Where deres da warp deres a way (a short prequel to brutal kunnin) so far. Have the first eisenhorn but havent gotten to it yet. Plan to get the rest of gaunts series. Hope mike brooks continues Ufthak Blackhawk's story. I reeeeally like him as a character, especially the more kunnin he gets and that prison conversation in Big Dakka *chefs kiss*
Coming back here to say that Spears of the Emperor is a fantastic book and my favourite 40k novel so far. I don't know if it's great for a person truly new to the universe, but it's a compelling novel with a great sense of the themes of the 41st (2nd?) millennium.
I´ve accumulate over 200 BL books so far but if I have to pick just a single one which I would recommend as an entry point it is "Helsreach" by Aaron Dembski Bowden. Personally, my first BL novel I've read was Angels of Darkness...it's tiny compared to the latter releases, which makes it probably a less intimidating book for a first read instead of the big tomes the likes of the Dawn of Fire series ^^
WH40K got me interested in reading again. I had fun getting introduced to the universe with the first four Space Wolves books. Now I'm onto the Eisenhorn series. Reading the first book. It's fing amazing.
Requiem Infernal is a really, really good "unreliable narrator" novel, portraying what is possibly one of the best representations of Chaos ever. Same thing for The Reverie, still by Peter Fehervari. This author follows the same will of displaying original and strange new cultures and worlds that Dan Abnett likes.
While I love Fehervaris work to bits and do consider him my favourite BL author, I'm not sure he's a good introduction per se - a lot of the subtle horror in his books comes imho from the mixture of familiar and unfamiliar things, of describing what *should* be familiar and twisting it - and for that to properly work, you need some familiarity to begin with. Requiem Infernal and the Reverie can take quite a bit of their punch from the sheer mystery of *what* chaos is going on - it's clearly Chaos, but... Not clearly readable. If you don't have familiarity with the four gods, that just won't work.
I don't even think you need the time jump. As you say these sorts of mini empires have always existed in setting (planets dealing with/colonised by the Tau even for into this bracket). Just set the next couple of campaigns out on the fringes where nobodies seen a space marine in generations and you'll start to get the message across. Throw in a couple of white dwarf articles on how to build a non Imperial world using the guard codex and other gw bits and you're off. Always keen to see how non Imperial settlements treat psykers and mutants. It's always felt like a big bit omission from the Tau colonisation worlds (unless it's been addressed and I've missed it).
I always recommend First and Only and Soul Hunter as first reads because they give the reader a good overview of the setting, background and politics. They're also fairly short and very well crafted stories.
When I first got into the Black Library, I actually started with the Ciaphis Cain series, it’s a good mix of subterfuge, comedy, and intrigue from the POV of Commissar Ciaphis Cain and his Valhallan Regiment.
If a friend asked me where to start I'd just tell them to start with the first five Horus Heresy novels, then read one of the 2nd Edition Codex at random. I'd suggest this because I haven't read the Warhammer 40k books, just assorted fluff and the the source books and the first dozen or so Horus Heresy books, oh and 'The Horus Heresy: Collected Visions' book. Well... that and I read all the old 'Inferno!' books that came out monthly, at the Games Workshop stores. Hey, Arbitor Ian - one day you should talk about the 'Inferno!' books one day...
On the warhammer crime front, I listened to bloodlines by Chris Wraight and really enjoyed it. My first BL novel was eye of terror, which like someone else in the comments said is some really weird stuff!
I recommend the Ciaphus Cain series. Cain is one of the most relatable protagonists in 40k and the humorous tone serves to ease you into the grim darkness of the setting. Plus many books are good introductions into factions like the tau, neurons and chaos.
Would you not say that these books are so funny and enjoyable because you already knew the setting though? Good second series Id say
He's like the Jack Sparrow of 40k
@@frankie3010 "Cain is a boring fratbro who somehow got a job as a comissar" and that's what makes him funny and relatable.
I've only read the first Cain book but I plan on doing a few more soon. I dig the guy precisely because he's so un-40k. It makes the setting a bit easier to swallow at times coz the tone is actually fun. Not that 40k books need to or should be fun and irreverent at all times but it's a nice change of pace.
Every single book and story is the exact same; he somehow always manages to find himself in some manner of tunnel
Helsreach was my introduction, which starts off with Grimaldus saying "I'm gong to die on this world." He has absolute contempt for the humans he's supposed to be protecting and he has a hissy fit when he learns he's stuck defending this stupid hive city instead of gloriously dying in space. And you learn what servitors are...it's all so awful it's kind of funny. Very entertaining.
I haven't read Helsreach (Only saw the fan animated movie) but didn't Grimaldus learn to kind of silently respect humans at the end?
@@razmere924 Well yeah of course that's his arc...not that there are many left alive to respect by the end. :)
@@razmere924 it is one of the BETER written stories for 40k which is not saying much.. the audio book is what was used for the animation of the series. is fantastic. I have yet to find anything better in ALL the 40k books out there..
One of my favorite books I ever read, not just from a Warhammer perspective
@@razmere924 For me Grimaldus showed disgust and admiration for humans equally throughout the book, with admiration winning out at the end. He never really understood them though. Their desires, motivations and behaviours were largely a mystery to him.
Solid recommendations! I started with Gaunt's Ghosts and can't recommend it more highly. Glad to see Tanith's First and Only are not forgotten.
I’m currently on listening to the 5th book Guns of Tanith on Audible. So many of the Ghosts are incredibly interesting.
Gaunt's Ghosts was my first book as well! really good
If folks are interested in Chaos Space Marines, I might recommend the Night Lords trilogy. It's a bit of a different kind of Chaos Legion, as they're only _partly_ invested in this whole Chaos business. Which actually gives you a good mix of character perspectives, as the Night Lords we follow are a mix of some Chaos worshipers and mostly just standard Night Lords. Which is to say, a bunch of bastards who were bastards even before the Heresy. Now that the Heresy (and their Primarch, Conrad Kurze) have come and gone, they're really bitter about the whole thing.
The group shown in the trilogy are also underdogs, which is a different angle than is usually shown with Chaos Space Marines. They're a company barely limping along, their numbers dwindling due to attrition, accidents, and infighting. Night Lords especially can be difficult to sympathize with (remember, they're the ones that mostly don't have Chaos as an excuse for how evil they are), but making them underdogs helps with this. You're left wanting to see them pull through, even if you might not necessarily want them to win.
Then again, part of the arc of the novels is the group (and specifically its main character, Talos) learning to not just survive, but grasp victory for the first time in millennia.
In the same vein, the Black Legion series by the same author is also really good. I think overall I like the Night Lords trilogy better because you get a bunch of viewpoint characters vs a single solitary protagonist (also why I prefer Ravenor over Eisenhorn) but if you've already read Night Lords and want more, Black Legion might be for you.
absolutely loved the night lords trilogy!
These where my first ever warhammer books i read and i absolutely LOVED them. Huge reccomend!
Agreed. The Nightlords Trilogy is amazing and the best thing i've read in years.
The Night Lords trilogy was my starting point, and a very understated point is that they are fucking AWESOME. Some of the best action sequences in a book I've read! Seriously if you want really good combat those books are for you
Dan Abnett’s “Titanicus” is an EXCELLENT introduction to the Adeptus Mechanicus and the Titan Legions, and is also part of the broader Sabbat War series that Gauntms Ghosts takes place in. A very good new reader friendly series is also Andy Hoare’s “Kingsblade/Knightsblade” which actually reads as a Young Adult novel, and is a very good introduction to Imperial Knights while also touching on the Astra Militarum, Inquisition, Orks and Chaos. The best Space Marine introduction book is from the Space Marine battles series, “Rynn’s World” by Steve Parker. That book shows you the entire structure of an Astartes chapter in relation to its mortal serfs and imperial population while also showcasing how dangerous Orks can be.
My introduction was William King's Space Wolf series, then Eisenhorn's trilogy, and then first 5 volumes of Horus Heresy. Random as it might seem, it gave me a good sense of the scale, an overlook on current affairs, and on 'what went wrong' part of the entire story. From there I'd say it's 'choose your own adventure' kind of thing. For me it was Gaunt's Ghosts series, and I've been keeping my straight silver close ever since :)
For Tanith! For the Emperor!
I started with Space Wolf (and followed with Eisenhorn) myself, and I’d say that’s the best possible opening. Space Wolf helped me understand how space marines are made and offered an interesting perspective of someone who goes through the process from the very beginning, while Eisenhorn does a brillant job at introducing the reader to the politics and social structure of the Imperium.
The Infinite and The Divine is just so good, it's about damn time we had some good Necron novels, and it makes a fantastic companion to The Twice Dead King which has me really impressed so far.
Both are great books but prolly not a great place to start.
@@joshuafarrington3649 id argue Twice Dead King is a great start for people interested in necrons, it lays out who they are and how they function while also introducing the imperium from the xenos perspective
@@joshuafarrington3649I started with The Infinite and the Divine, and besides the beginning where I was confused what shuriken pistols and the eldari dinosaur things were, the book does a really good job explaining everything else for newcomers, likely because Black Library expects this to be a readers first necron book
I have been a reader of D&D for some time, mainly Forgotten Realms. I am looking forward to the 40k series. Appreciate your notes
Particularly I recommend starting with short stories collections. They are fun and quick ways to get to know the 40K environment, practices, believes and diversity of factions and races.
It genuinely surprises me that there wasn’t a dedicated rouge trader series.
Andy Hoare did a Rogue Trader series years. I haven't read them so I don't know if they're any good though.
There are two Rogue trader series though?
You’d think that Rogue Traders with their ability to go pretty much anywhere would lend themselves to a good series of interconnected short stories.
There wasn't a blue trader series either :(
@@CrimsonTemplar2 it could be structured like a mix BSG and classic Star Trek.
I always use the Ciaphas Cain series to ease people in to the setting as really easy to sell it to non-fans "It's Blackadder in space" and personally I think the series does a great job of easing you into the craziness of the setting (I started with Horus Rising and went from there - talk about in at the deep end HaHaHa)
By far the best audiobooks I’ve listened to within the 40k universe.
Agreed. And all the footnotes in the books help a lot for newcomers into the WH40K universe that dont know almost anything.
Perfect analogy
@@Roboute727 Aye, and as it goes through the series you meet many of the different factions (Orks, Necrons, Genestealers/'nids, Chaos - I don't think he's met Aeldari yet) and get a nice, simple explination of them and what they're like. It's a cracking jumping on point
Yeah, after reading Eisenhorn trilogy and some 8-9 books from Horus heresy I thought that in grim darkness of far future comedy and humor have been dead for thousands of years. And then Ciaphas Cain series came along. The stark contrast just shocked me. In a good way.
Thank you so much! I have just started reading the Horus Heresy and was trying to find all stories pertaining to the Ultramarines. This video is extremely helpful!!! Thank you for the time and effort you put into this!
Just got my copy of the Eisenhorn trilogy BECAUSE of this video! Thank you!!❤❤
The Great work does a huge amount of fleshing out for Cawl, plus some really cool stuff goes down :D
The Infinite and the Divine is probably my favourite GW book (And ive read most of them) just... top work!
I&D was so much fun, like Douglas Adams doing 40k. Just finished Brutal Kunnin which is Prachett doing Orks - laugh out loud funny in places
Couldn’t find Eisenhorn at the bookstore, so I walked out with MARK OF FAITH, a Sororitas novel, and it’s surprisingly very good! I’m about halfway through so far but it’s not only setting up two intricately woven protagonists, but it also really captures the inner truth of what it means to be a battle sister guided by faith in something you can’t communicate with
I have been reading through the Heresy books...I love them...working on "Legion" right now...action packed.
Definitely a solid stand alone story and one of the few books that actually gets the Alpha Legion correctly
Does anybody know how to read the Heresy in Order, I've seen the PDF but feel free to link it, also
I started with the Black Legion series (Talon of Horus) since I'm a big chaos fan (base knowledge of 40k, but never read the books before that) and it was the BEST starting point imo. I LOVE ADB and he's by far my favorite WH author even after reading many others
Thank you for writing my comment for me. Well, I was 2 decades and about 50 novels into WH40K by the time I read them, but good to hear that my judgement wasn't totally clouded :D
I recently started with the Ciaphas Cain, HERO OF THE IMPERIUM! , series.
My personal favorite book from Black Library is The Infinite and The Divine.
It’s a wonderful introduction to Trazyn, and Orikahn, a look into Necron Society, and gives people an understanding that the Necrons aren’t just “Soulless Terminators In Space”… which… they are- but they have wants, and personalities all their own.
My intro to WH40k was the Fire Warrior book (based on the bad game). It was a great place to start because the main POV character was part of an alien race that was relatively new to the WH40k universe. Plus it was a fun pulpy action book
Perfect timing.. got a friend wanting to get into the books so will recommend this vid to him
Path of the Eldar series is also a real good non-Imperium series. Good introduction to Eldar society and how they structure their armies.
I'd recommend Ahriman: The Exile and Ahriman: Sorcerer for those interested in the Thousand Sons at all. It's probably the most sympathetic portrayal of the Chaos side I have ever seen to the point it might make heretics out of people. I know there are a lot of interest in the Thousand Sons right now because Rubric Marines have been selling out all over the damn place. If you're going to build an army of dusty Egyptian sorcerers, you might as well get to know the best one there is, Ahriman the Bad Ass.
I really appreciate the recommendation for Spears of the Emperor. Not being the biggest fan of space marines it wasn't on my radar at all but I got the audiobook and really enjoyed it.
Only book I've read so far and I struggled to put it down at times
This is a video that I would have wished was made a few years ago. Such a great topic! Super useful for new 40K community members :)
same here!
Just started the Eisenhorn Omnibus - brilliant. Great recommendation, thanks!
As a complete newcomer to the series/franchise as a whole, this was a great vid to get my bearings and look to dive into the 40k world. Cheers!
For me the best starters outside the first five horus heresy books are:
Inquisitor by Dan Abnett
Ciaphas Cain by Sandy Mitchell
Gaunt’s Ghosts by Dan Abnett
Ultramarines by Graham McNeill
Iron Warriors by Graham McNeill
Excellent reccomendations, really glad to see the Shira Calpurnia trilogy in there - often overlooked but it does a fantastic job of illustrating the world of 40K and how it actually works in a civilian setting. In the grim darkness of the far future there may only be war but in order to fuel that the economy has to keep rolling.
that has always been the parts of the 40K universe I have found most interesting, the moments when you get a peek at what civilian life is like in such a place - looks like the Calpurnia trilogy is something I would love reading
If you want to get into space marines, the ultramarines/ iron warriors omnibus is a nice introduction, since you get a taste of the large scale conflicts, but even more small missions, driven by character.
Also it’s interesting to see so many parts of the lore and the conflict explored (from both sides)
I started with Ian Watson's Space Marine published by boxtree. Never knew about GW but started getting white dwarf the month after. Went to a very interesting talk with Ian Watson a few years after that. (Edited to change Livingston to Watson. I got my Ians mixed up)
Ian Watson wrote Space Marine (and the Inquisiton trilogy), those four were the first novels I read about 40K. they are a bit janky by today's standards, but i liked them.
@@tigerstein dammit. Wrong Ian. I'll edit that. Thanks very much for bringing it to my attention.
@@kendoyle For a moment my brain was confused too about which Ian is which. Needed to search for it to clear it up :)
I think Ian Livingston wrote "The Space Marine of Firetop Mountain" 😜
@@tigerstein I agree the Inquisition ones are utterly bonkers however Space Marine like other books from that period (Drachenfels or Beasts in Velvet for two other examples) are miles better than many of today's efforts. Mainly as back then you were guaranteed an actual author rather than someone promoted in house who after writing rules was convinced that they could just as well with actual novels and were then willing to churn them out regardless of quality *cough*Gav Thorpe*cough*.
As a faithful servant of the dark Gods I would also like to recommend some books from the chaos point of view:
Talon of Horus and Black legion(great if you want to learn about the origins of the black legion, also might change your opinion on Abaddon since he has been memed to death by the community)
Lords of silence (hey, just because you are a disgusting and mutated monstrosity doesn't mean you can't have life goals)
The night lords trilogy (just because we skin people alive doesn't mean we are all bad!)
honorable mentions to the Fabius Bile and Ahriman trilogies. I have not read them my self, but I have heard nothing but praise!
The Gaunts Ghosts series is a good start. Also, its weird how people forget that the Halo Scar pretty much started disappearing after the events of the Priests of Mars series and the Kotov/Telok expedition
what happened to Caiphas Cain!! ok, there are pros and cons to the writing style, but all in all, very light hearted, funny, and good at introducing the different inhabitants of the universe :)
For people who are loosely acquainted with 40k lore, but wanna know what's happening right now, I'd recommend Shroud of Night. It is one of the few Alpha Legion books, with, while not deep, likable legionaries, and it has cameos from notable players like Celestine and Kharn, as well as an intro to Primaris, as well as how the Heretic Marines and Firstborn Marines react to them.
Well that without doubt is the best explanation of the 40K universe I have ever read/heard. Well done and a massive thank you.
Your video production skills are amazing. :)
Although I'm not completely new to Warhammer 40k, I was there in 1990, but other than picking up some of the world building through the game and reading Rogue Trader cover to cover this was some time ago and I've not really 'kept in touch'. So, this is incredibly helpful, many thanks.
I started my journey into the Black Library with the stories of Uriel Ventris in the Ultramarines Omnibus. Even if you're not the biggest fan of the Ultramarines, its a good series of books and it's been a go to for me when recommending starting points for 40k.
I started listening to Nightbringer after watching Arch video about how Chaos recruit/make more space marines and he recommended Dead Sky, Black Sun so I thought that starting with Nightbringer would be a good start and I enjoyed it, looking forward to listening to the rest of the series.
Been watching yt videos about general lore and this omnibus is pretty good start even with surface lore knowledge
Oh and my god the imagery is amazing which sells it as well
A friend of mine recommended Ciaphas Cain as my entry point to 40K. Though that may have been taking my personal tastes I to account, too.
Thanks for the recommendations I've dipped in and out of warhammer 40k novels for years mostly books in the Horus Heresy era so I've just used this month's Audible token on Dan Annetts Necropolis as I love to hear what life is like for normal working folk in the warhammer universe
The Gaunts Ghosts series are amazing and the best series from my perspective. The entire Sabbat World setting is great och very nicely detailed. You truly feel how powerful how both loyal and traitor Astartes are compared to normal soldiers and the battles are told in a very detailed and vivid way. The characters are great and as in game of thrones no one is safe..
Another great vid!! 👍
My first books were Ian Watson's novels, and after those the Gaunt's Ghosts series. But my first introduction to Warhammer 40k was the first Dawn of War game.
I love that there are so many short stories. I just barely got into warhammer and my first read is ghazghkull thraka by nate crowley. I'm loving how it's told so far.
I'm so hyped to get into it and kind of like that I have so many options to go from here.
Thanks, Ian! I was overwhelmed trying to figure out where to start lol
I can also recommend the ciaphas Cain books
I just read 2 caiphus caine books those were my first
I think the Caphias Cain Novels are a good startpoint aswell.
I would love if you would do a seperat video about the series.
I honestly think the tau’s farsight series is also a good intro to the universe. The tau whilst alien, have a view of the world that’s closer to a modern human’s understanding of the world. It gives you a great outsider view of the 40k universe as the characters in it are slowly being confronted with the horrors of said universe and having to try and understand it.
Knocked it out of the park! Took your suggestions and just finished Spear of the Emperor and will go to Brothers of the Snake next. I’m in😂👊🏼
I just bought the Enforcer omnibus, so glad to see that spoken of highly here!
I'd suggest the Forges of Mars trilogy as well, especially if you love the Cog Boys or weird xenos stuff, as it features many branches of the Admech and Imperium, but has Eldar, Hrud, Orks, Rogue Traders and a whole load of other good stuff in there.
I've never actually played a game of Warhammer, but I have read some of the stories about CIAPHAS CAIN, HERO OF THE IMPERIUM, and they're quite fun 😃
I loved Ian Watson’s Inquisitor book. I think that was the first WH40k novel, though I could be wrong. I liked the idea that the genius emperor could keep secrets from himself thanks to a dissociative identity condition.
Fifteen hours was where I started, I thank its a great starting place.
Great video! I’m currently wrapping up halo series this month. Think I’m going to read some Star Wars for a few months and jump into 40k. I couldn’t get into the games but might be able to for the books
I read the spears of the emperor by your recommendation, first ever WH40k book, and what a book man super good can't wait to jump on the other books now
I had played 40k back in the Second Edition days, so my introduction to the lore was the short pieces of fiction found in the various Codex and Rule books, but it wasn't until a co-worker of mine (who actively played/painted/collected for the tabletop game) told me about the novels that I got actively interested in reading. He suggested I start with the Imperial Guard books, because they're the most easily relatable faction (being mostly human and just ordinary people as opposed to genetically-modified supermen), and he couldn't have been more on the money. "Rebel Winter", "Fifteen Hours", "Death World", and "Gunheads" were my introduction, and from there, I just kept rolling. :)
Thank you for all these great recommendations!
I've read a bunch of 40k novels and I still think that Space Wolf is my favorite so far. It's pretty simple all about one guy's training but it does a really effective job building the setting.
Great vid, I've only just started reading 40k books. I started with The Emperors Gift by Aaron Dembski-Bowden because I like Grey Knights and there's not much written about them. I'm currently enjoying the Eisenhorn books and although I've already got some others queued up I'll take a look at some of your recommendations too.
Great review, and some very solid advices (Eisenhorn/Ravenor and Gaunt's Ghosts series are very good sci fi series in their own rights). I'm a bit disapointed that you didn't mention the Beast series also. Granted, the time setting is a bit off if you are considering only the 40-41K timeline, but it has the advantage of blending in politics at different levels, well developped human characters, space marine characters that actually have something more than only war on their mind, and really frightening xenos.
I disagree, that series was full of padding, it was probably twice as long as it needed to be
I enjoyed the series, but I do think they padded it out near the end. But the main reason I didn't include that or the Heresy was that those series are way better if you already know the 40k setting, because then you get all the Easter eggs and origin story reveals!
Ok, SO: I've been watching 40k vids for a while; I dig it, and I dig scifi, grimdark, expansive settings, etc, so 40k may be something I could get into, but there is SO much out there!
I (think that I) know the timeline, factions, major characters, etc... I've seen this vid, but I'd like input from fans as well as content creators (who are also fans, but...)
Reccomendations?
Thanks, really useful! Just read the first Gaunts ghost book and wasn’t sure where to go after that.
Fantastic work, sir! Ill happily recommend it to any acquaintances who might want to delve into 40k.
As for us Eldar players, I would very much recommend both the Path of the Eldar and Path of the Dark Eldar trilogies. And the related Mask of Vyle, a Harlequin/Dark Eldar book.
Also I did like both Ynnari books, shame these did not sell well.
Both Phoenix Lords books (Asurmen and Jain Zar) I've got mixed feelings. On one hand, they were ok, but I somehow did not imagine the Fall and the start of the whole Path system, as described. Also, why there are only two? I need my Dark Phoenix story and finally know, what exactly happened!
They are all great recommendations. Personally I loved Mask of Vyle most but you need both the Eldar and Dark Eldar trilogy to appreciate it. For the Phoenix Lords books I found Jain Zar really good but Asurmen was kind of a let down but still a good read.
Thank you for your recommendation. I am reading Xenos and am really enjoying it.
Count myself lucky I read the short stories in White Dwarf 30 years ago onwards to get some insight for the novels that followed.
I just started really getting into reading scifi/fantasy novels like Blindsight, Hyperion, Three Body Problem, and have been a World of Warcraft fanatic since 2004 and I always come across 40k shorts and clips and lore clips and the series as a whole seems so awesome and rich with lore and stories and I have absolutely no idea how to start getting into the books lol.
Night lords omnibus is a extremely good starting point too. ADB at his finest
My suggestion is to start with whatever topic interests you. I know there are classics, but I don't consider them as much required reading as solid recommendations.
Personally, I'm scrounging for information about the Thunder Warriors. So I'm working my way through the cited sources on their wiki pages.
Great list. I only started reading 40k about two years ago.
I agree that the first Dawn of Fire book Avenging Son is a good jumping on point for the universe. A large part of the story takes place on Terra so you get some good human perspectives of those that work within the insane bureaucracy of the Imperium. There's a subplot with an inquisitor and lots of other snapshots of the universe as a whole.
I think novel Dante is a good introduction to Space marines. It is an origin story about a human's path to becoming a space marine. Definitely worth a read. After Dante, the second book, The Devastation of Baal is pretty much everything I'd want out a 40K war story. It is epic. So you have somewhere to go next if you like the first book.
Spears of the Emperor is my favourite BL I read this year. I may have even started a fully converted ES force...
The book that was recommended to me as a start was The Bloodied Rose by Danie Ware. Follows a squad of Sisters of Battle and I really enjoyed it! I found it was a very smooth entry into that faction.
I started at the Eisenhorn series. I watched alot of lore videos 1st so i understood some things beforehand. I did the Ravanor books next, most of Cain books, and 1st 4 Horus Heresy books. The Ravanor books surprised me when they encountered tyranid gaunts and didnt know what they were. It was a time travel thing and it was stated that they would be a threat in 300 years. Didnt realize till then that those books were that far back of current timeline of 40k.
I'm a lapsed gamer from the 90's who still enjoys the lore and have just stumbled across your channel.
Must say; LOVE the unapologetic antifascist bent; SO refreshing to hear nowadays.
Your videos are well presented and informative too.
All power and continued success to your arm.
Thanks!
Night Lords Trilogy is probably one of the best in the wh40k setting.
It is really engaging considering that the books protagonists are a bunch of ruthless murderers.
Ruthless murderers is an understatement, we kinda forget as we get attached to them, but they are the worst of the fucking worst. It's the second act of Voidstalker that really hammers that in.
It does sound like an interesting way to get an unusual perspective.
@@bluespaceman7937 it is. but i dont think it is an good entry. this shit gets very very dark.
But its one of my favourites.
@@KillyBilly141bro, I’m planning on getting the first three Horus Heresy books, The First Heretic, Space Wolf omnibus 1&2 and the Night Lords omnibus (maybe even Gaunts Ghost), does that sound like a decent lil collection of books?
In my opinion double eagle by dan Abnett is probably the best book for beginners for a few reasons, it’s a brilliant book, probably the best black Library book I’ve read. Its a single, self contained, story, so requires no prior knowledge of the setting or reading a huge series to see how it ends, but at the same time ties into the Gaunt’s ghosts book, leaving an opportunity to delve deeper into black library for the context behind the war. Its whole ‘Battle of Britain but in space’ thing makes it easy to understand what’s going on for non 40K fans, and it has a great cast of memorable and relatable characters, that shows a great mix of military and civilian life in the 41st millennium
I can second the Wrath of Iron recommendation. It's a great book about the Iron hands, excellently written, maybe my favourite Imperium book. It questions whether the pain the Imperium puts humanity through is even justified by its survival.
I don't play the game, but I do like the lore and the stories within it. Thanks to your recommendation, I started with the fantastic Eisenhorn Trilogy (or quadrology now?), and of course that lead me to the Ravenor and Bequin spin offs (If you see Dan, tell him to hurry up and finish Pandemonium).
As a minor point, and probably utterly irrelevant for a video that's 2½ years old, but in the Chapters section, you have the Eisenhorn trilogy down as The Eisenhower Trilogy.
Once again The Bob Ross of Warhammer drops an epic video.
I started with the space wolves omnibus. I found it was a good starting point because it starts from a human’s point of view and then changes gradually as he is transformed into a space wolf
Currently enjoying The Lords of Silence by Chris Wraight. It's an interesting spin on the life and slow decay of a warband of the Death Guard, although it does seem to jump around a bit within it's own timeline, which can be a tad confusing at first. Definitely NOT a "where to start" kind of book though, but worth a look if you are already embedded into the world of 40K.
Yeah, I really enjoyed that one. Also ties really well into Warhawk too!
Can’t wait for you and Mira to get to the Gaunt’s Ghosts books :)
I would highly recommend ‘The Path of’ series for Aeldari point of view …. three books - Path of the Warrior - Path of the Farseer & Path of the Outcast.
Excellent series and really good to provide the counter point to humanity 😊
I definitely think Ciaphas Cain is a great entry point too.
Same. Way better than Guant if you're judging on the basis of the first novel of each series.
Hey great vid.
Im an Imperium fan. but just curious where to start when it comes what led up to the Indomitus crusade. then to current.
Do i do start the Fall of Cadia series?
Then Dawn of Fire to Dark Imperium?
Hmmm difficult. Fall of cadia is just one book and it tells that story, but then stops there and nobody from that book turns up again.
Then you have the Watchers of the Throne (first actual era Indomitus series, Guilliman arrives at terra, politics change), Dawn of Fire (the Indomitus Crusade sets out) and Dark Imperium (12 years later and Guilliman is kinda making peace with being holy imperial jesus)
The really important bit (Guilliman resurrected by Cawl, Yvraine and Celestine) isn't novelised. It's in a campaign book, Gathering Storm, on Warhammer vaukt
LOVE Ghazkull Prophet of da waagh, Brutal Kunnin, Da Big Dakka, Warboss, Son of the Forest, Infinite & Divine, First and Only (didnt do the omnibus, just the first to try out the series), and Where deres da warp deres a way (a short prequel to brutal kunnin) so far. Have the first eisenhorn but havent gotten to it yet. Plan to get the rest of gaunts series. Hope mike brooks continues Ufthak Blackhawk's story. I reeeeally like him as a character, especially the more kunnin he gets and that prison conversation in Big Dakka *chefs kiss*
Coming back here to say that Spears of the Emperor is a fantastic book and my favourite 40k novel so far. I don't know if it's great for a person truly new to the universe, but it's a compelling novel with a great sense of the themes of the 41st (2nd?) millennium.
I´ve accumulate over 200 BL books so far but if I have to pick just a single one which I would recommend as an entry point it is "Helsreach" by Aaron Dembski Bowden. Personally, my first BL novel I've read was Angels of Darkness...it's tiny compared to the latter releases, which makes it probably a less intimidating book for a first read instead of the big tomes the likes of the Dawn of Fire series ^^
WH40K got me interested in reading again. I had fun getting introduced to the universe with the first four Space Wolves books. Now I'm onto the Eisenhorn series. Reading the first book. It's fing amazing.
Requiem Infernal is a really, really good "unreliable narrator" novel, portraying what is possibly one of the best representations of Chaos ever. Same thing for The Reverie, still by Peter Fehervari. This author follows the same will of displaying original and strange new cultures and worlds that Dan Abnett likes.
While I love Fehervaris work to bits and do consider him my favourite BL author, I'm not sure he's a good introduction per se - a lot of the subtle horror in his books comes imho from the mixture of familiar and unfamiliar things, of describing what *should* be familiar and twisting it - and for that to properly work, you need some familiarity to begin with. Requiem Infernal and the Reverie can take quite a bit of their punch from the sheer mystery of *what* chaos is going on - it's clearly Chaos, but... Not clearly readable. If you don't have familiarity with the four gods, that just won't work.
I don't even think you need the time jump. As you say these sorts of mini empires have always existed in setting (planets dealing with/colonised by the Tau even for into this bracket).
Just set the next couple of campaigns out on the fringes where nobodies seen a space marine in generations and you'll start to get the message across.
Throw in a couple of white dwarf articles on how to build a non Imperial world using the guard codex and other gw bits and you're off.
Always keen to see how non Imperial settlements treat psykers and mutants. It's always felt like a big bit omission from the Tau colonisation worlds (unless it's been addressed and I've missed it).
I always recommend First and Only and Soul Hunter as first reads because they give the reader a good overview of the setting, background and politics. They're also fairly short and very well crafted stories.
Xenos was my first entry into the series, will never forget the night I started up the audiobook for the first time
When I first got into the Black Library, I actually started with the Ciaphis Cain series, it’s a good mix of subterfuge, comedy, and intrigue from the POV of Commissar Ciaphis Cain and his Valhallan Regiment.
I love this, watched more than once. Could you do one for the Seige of Terra, because for me that's seriously hit and miss as well!
In my opinion, Ciaphas Cain is as good as Eisenhorn and a much lighter read. I love your videos! I have been binging them for a week. 10/10.
If a friend asked me where to start I'd just tell them to start with the first five Horus Heresy novels, then read one of the 2nd Edition Codex at random. I'd suggest this because I haven't read the Warhammer 40k books, just assorted fluff and the the source books and the first dozen or so Horus Heresy books, oh and 'The Horus Heresy: Collected Visions' book.
Well... that and I read all the old 'Inferno!' books that came out monthly, at the Games Workshop stores. Hey, Arbitor Ian - one day you should talk about the 'Inferno!' books one day...
On the warhammer crime front, I listened to bloodlines by Chris Wraight and really enjoyed it. My first BL novel was eye of terror, which like someone else in the comments said is some really weird stuff!