Many translated example sentences containing '6 de enero Reyes Magos' – English-Spanish dictionary and search engine for English translations. Mar 6, 2018 - Inquisitor Eisenhorn returns in a stunning new novel that pits him against his oldest foe, forcing him to finally confront the growing darkness.
Welcome to this instalment of Rapid Fire, my ongoing series of quick interviews with Black Library authors talking about their new releases. These are short and sweet interviews, with the idea being that each author will answer (more or less) the same questions – by the end of each interview I hope you will have a good idea of what the new book (or audio drama) is about, what inspired it and why you might want to read or listen to it.In this instalment I spoke to Dan Abnett about his latest 40k novel, The Magos, which is available to order right now. I suspect this is going to be a very popular bookOver to Dan.Track of Words: What’s the elevator pitch summary for The Magos?Dan Abnett: It’s the unexpected fourth volume of the Eisenhorn trilogy!
Late in his violent career, Gregor Eisenhorn tracks his old rivals – the Cognitae (they’re sort of an anti-Inquisitional heretical sect) – to a remote world, and encounters a threat that exposes the disarming truth about what he is and why he does what he does.ToW: Without spoiling anything, who are the main characters and what do we need to know about them?DA: Eisenhorn himself, and a band of followers that include some beloved and loyal characters like the bounty hunter Harlon Nayl and the pilot Medea Betancore. In fact, if you’re a keen reader of my stories and a fan of the Inquisitor books in particular, this novel has a LOT of old faces in in it – some unexpected!ToW: Where and when is it set?DA: It’s set late in his career, so it falls AFTER the Ravenor trilogy and just before Pariah, the first of the Bequin trilogy. It’s almost a prologue to Pariah.ToW: Is there anything that you’d recommend readers check out before reading this?DA: To get the full impact, it would probably help to have read the original Eisenhorn trilogy. The Ravenor trilogy would help too, and for that extra spice, Pariah, so you know where we’re going. But it also stands up on its own for new readers. Plus, there are a great number of introductory stories included in this volume before you get to the new novel.ToW: Why this story?
What made you want to write this in particular?DA: Not for the first time in the last 10 years, Black Library suggested I put together all the Eisenhorn and Inquisitor short stories that I’ve written over the years in one anthology, to act as a companion to the original novel trilogy. There’s almost a book’s worth of them, so they asked if I’d write a new Eisenhorn story to cap the collection off. It was supposed to be about 10K words. I had a great idea for it, which included a way to link it to all the older stories in the collection.Then, as I wrote, it got longer and longer first a novella. Finally, I had to admit that what I was actually writing was a full length new novel. That took even me by surprise!
This collection still includes all those old short stories (because that was the point in the first place) but ends up with the new, full length novel to tie them all together. If nothing else, it’s massively good value! Two books in one!ToW: Do you see Eisenhorn in a different light these days, having subsequently written about Ravenor and Bequin? Do you approach his character in a different way to when you were first writing him?DA: Probably, because he and I have both aged. And knowing where the story had to leave him (ready for Pariah) was very informative. But otherwise, it was like bumping into an old friend.
I think that’s why the original short story I was intending to write became a novel. There was so much to say, so much to explore again. Quite simply, it was amazing fun and I got carried away.ToW: What were your main influences when writing it? Did you draw upon any real-life experience to help you plan or write it?DA: Oddly, I suppose it does.
It’s about looking back and getting older. I was both aware of the passage of time, and of the distance between now and me writing the original books. I think that gives it a distinct quality. But then, the real world has an impact on everything I write, even if I’m not aware of it when I’m writing. Both Prospero Burns and Embedded were influenced by my diagnosis of epilepsy a few years ago.but I didn’t realise that until people pointed it out afterwards!ToW: How does this story compare to the rest of your work?
Is it a familiar style, or a departure?DA: It’s very much written in ‘Inquisitor mode’, though unlike the first Eisenhorn books, it’s not first person (for reasons that will become obvious when you read it). So, more like the Ravenor books in style.ToW: Do you have plans to continue any aspects of this story, or is it a standalone piece?DA: It definitely continues in Pariah, and writing it has helped me flesh out what I’m doing with the other two Bequin novels – Penitent and Pandaemonium. Also, writing it reminded me how much fun I have writing Inquisitor books, so those two Bequin volumes, long overdue, have moved up my ‘to do list’ with some urgency.
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I can’t wait to get them finished and published!.Thanks as always to Dan for taking the time to answer these questions. Keep an eye out for a review of The Magos very shortly, just as soon as I’ve got my hands on a copy! If you fancy taking a look at some other Rapid Fire interviews.If you’ve got any questions, comments or other thoughts please do let me know in the comments below, on Facebook or Twitter, or by emailing me at [email protected].
There's one thing that should be made clear before this begins: This isn't simply a new novel.People seeking to pick up this new release might be surprised to find that it is an omnibus length book, retaining the same page count as the entire Eisenhorn trilogy leading up to this work. The reason for this is that it retains more or less every short story published surrounding the series to date. From a few rare examples to several audio-to-text adaptations, over half of the book is made up of things we have seen before from across Eisenhorn's career. No, because it gives Games Workshop a reason to reprint those stories, and there's not a bad one among them.That said, for time constraints, this is going to skip those for the moment.
Instead, this will focus purely on The Magos itself, and judge the qualities of that work. Brief bite-sized reviews of the short stories might come at a later date, but this is just going to cover the new story.The Synopsis' Inquisitor Gregor Eisenhorn has spent his life stalking the darkest and most dangerous limits of the Imperium in pursuit of heresy and Chaos. But how long can a man walk that path without succumbing to the lure of the Warp? Is Eisenhorn still a champion of the Throne, or has he been seduced by the very evil that he hunts?' It's not often we simply stick to the official blurb, but there's a lot here which can easily be spoiled. If the review as a whole seems as if it is attempting to write around certain details, that's only because it is. This is definitely a great addition to the saga, but you need to go in blind to fully appreciate more than a few of its best points.
As such, the review below will highlight its best and worst qualities, but it might not be nearly so detailed as the usual reviews.The GoodIt would be easy to say 'It's Eisenhorn' and then drop the metaphorical mic and leave. You know this is going to be good as, even in the absolute worst of the short stories, they are still miles ahead of many of their contemporaries. However, to offer a more detailed outline of the best qualities found within The Magos, you need to look into how it is set up.By the end of Hereticus, everything was more or less finished.
The titular Inquisitor had come to the very end of his promised arc, only to disappear in the final afterward. The characters broke up to follow their own lives, with several crossing over into the Ravenor trilogy. As such, this could have easily seemed like a needless one-shot, and yet it works near perfectly. This is thanks as much to the overall depiction of its protagonist in its current state as the core villain.The Eisenhorn that we see here has more than a simple 'I've gone off of the deep end' tone to him, nor even the acceptance of his Radicalism. Instead, there is a noted effort to almost mentally ignore it. This isn't so much an outright effort to blind himself to having gone so far, nor even to try and live out a life now lost to him, but simply to not register it.
While difficult to describe without spoiling a few notable scenes, it makes for an interesting contrast with most variants of Inquisitor gone bad. Eisenhorn as he is neither fits into the extremist insisting that he is right nor even the unwitting pawn of Chaos.
Instead, it's a bizarre twist which makes his descent all the more chilling. You can still easily see the man who fought against Glaw in there, and at times he seems almost unchanged. The moment you do start to accept that, the book adds a brief but very sharp reminder of just what has transpired and what he now associates himself with.The core villain of the book is also a definite strength, turning what could have easily been a one-shot figure into a surprisingly memorable foe. In the past books, we had a solid string of antagonists. First there was the Glaw Household, with a full introduction and outline of their personas. Then it was a shadowy figure of such power that Eisenhorn only confronted and even directly spoke with him at the last moment.
Then it was a sin Eisenhorn had created, born of his own desperate need and a sign of how his compromises would come back to bite him. Each filled out a specific role in reflecting the Inquisitor's own state and indicating things to come. So, adding in a figure for a single novel, after that character arc is finished, could have turned him into a simple obstacle to be overcome.Instead, the 'oldest and most constant foe' the blurb promises establishes something which could be seen as a manifestation of the Imperium's greatest failings. Something which is parallel to the protagonist himself, and yet has been born from a very different origin.
Saying anything more would be spoiling an excellent book but it is a welcome twist which grants the tome an identity of its own, rather than being some tacked on adventure.The presentation of the fights and the engagements here are low key up to a point. You'll know the exact moment when it does throw things out the window and goes into the sort of battle Ravenor is known for. Prior to that, however, the book tries to better emphasise the investigation and drama angles the series is best famed for. In fact, it handles it better than more than a few previous installments, as it doesn't feel the need to throw in nearly as many battles or Die Hard stunts to keep things interesting.
It's a different flavour of storytelling, but it fits in well with the age in which it is set, and even the style of storytelling present in the short tales leading up to it.The characters accompanying Eisnehorn himself are spectacularly written, as is to be expected by this point. With a few returning faces and one particular daemonic entity, the story has plenty of well-developed individuals to call upon. How some have reacted following the fall-out of past series is commented upon, and it is used to reflect on the current state of the group.
Specifically what they have become and how they are required to operate now. Most are given a chance to shine within the work, and a few even benefit from short character arcs which cover several chapters. This offers them more to do than what was typically found in the main trilogy, and helps to better integrate the new faces into the overall work.However, the use of interrogatories, detective work and subterfuge is where The Magos truly shines. While it is far less Mission Impossible than what Ravenor usually offered, there's a degree more engagement in seeing how the characters adapt, work and overcome challenges with very finite resources. It's clear that they have little to fall back on, which turns it into less of a spy thriller and more of a Shadowrun experience with Inquisitorial figures involved.The BadThe obvious inherent weakness of the book is simply the flaw all singular series suffer from - Continuity lockout. With an intended ongoing one, one with multiple arcs and planned to keep going as needed, you can create jumping on points and ease new readers into them.
Many of you are likely thinking of comics, but even Gaunt's Ghosts features this. In the case of The Magos, an inherent familiarity of the past tales is required to truly get to grips with it. Many minor or secondary elements which old hands might have forgotten and cannot simply be gleaned from skimming over a wikia page are present here, which makes it difficult to dive headlong into without prior preparation. This might sound odd, but even as someone who has read the original Eisenhorn and Ravenor series a dozen times over each, I was finding myself having to go back to see if I was misremembering events.Furthermore, the book also pushes to be semi-self contained in a manner akin to the previous entries.
Unlike those, a few later segments seem rushed in how they close out events. While past books - Especially Xenos - could write off characters thanks to the substantial time-skips or even the lifestyle of an Inquisitor, in this case it seems to force them closed. This ends with more than a few stories coming to a very abrupt end, and while this is infinitely less jarring than it might have been under another penman, it's a noted difference from past works.
Almost as if part of the book were attempting to wipe the slate clean, while the other half left enough dangling elements to follow on later. The problem is, the two do not quite mesh, creating a somewhat jarring situation.With the presence of many new characters here, especially among Eisenhorn's entourage, there are more than a few occasions where they seem notably superfluous. While previous installments had their fair share of shock deaths, dispensible fodder and minor figures, there was always a solid core of figures to fall back on. With so many of them removed here, several of the major players end up carrying out a very similar role. They are thankfully their own characters and remain distinct enough to be more than a simple substitute, but you can easily find yourself mentally noting that they have been added to cover for a specific role.Perhaps the greatest flaw to be found within The Magos is how it ultimately tries to rely on atmosphere more than descriptions.
Abnett himself tends to go back and forth on this point, with some works favouring creating a sense or specific emotion within a scene over lengthy details, while others build a distinct image. Neither one is particularly wrong, and Abnett tends to use one or the other depending upon what he is writing. The thing is, however, that the past Eisenhorn works favoured the latter, whereas The Magos is very much the former. Many scenes in past books hinged very heavily on extremely detailed and very distinct environments, so to jump right from that to a very different approach can be discordant.
You can argue that this isn't an inherent problem with this book, but when it ties so closely into a larger series, it is worth citing as a flaw in the overall narrative.The VerdictThis was definitely the sort of book Pariah should have been. Along with the action being centred on a familiar protagonist over a new figure stuck in an invisible war on unfamiliar factions, it fills in many gaps and helps to set the scene for the events to come. While Eisenhorn's character arc had dome to a natural end with Hereticus, this manages to keep the story going without feeling like a superfluous extension.The only serious criticism truly is that it is heavily tied into past series continuity, and has been written with old fans in mind.
Combined with a rather abrupt conclusion, it's definitely not something new fans or even those with a passing familiarity with the series will be able to get into. Then again, that merely justifies introducing them to one of Black Library's greatest trilogies.
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