Product Details
Blood Angels: Deus Encarmine (Warhammer 40,000)

Blood Angels: Deus Encarmine (Warhammer 40,000)
By James Swallow

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Product Description

Whilst taking the fight to the Chaos Marines of the Word Bearers Chapter, one of the Blood Angels starts to resemble their leader - Sanguinius. Has the Blood Angels messiah been reborn or are darker things at work?


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #220482 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-01-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"'A story packed with action and hardcore military sci-fi in a dark and brutal universe.' - RPG United"

About the Author
James Swallow has written several books, including Star Trek: Terok Nor: Day of the Vipers and Seeds of Dissent (from Star Trek: Myriad Universes: Infinity's Prism); the Sundowners quartet of ?steampunk' science fiction Westerns (Ghost Town, Underworld, Iron Dragon and Showdown); the best-selling novelization of The Butterfly Effect; The Flight of the Eisenstein, Faith and Fire and Jade Dragon; the 2000AD tie-ins Eclipse, Blood Relative and Whiteout; Stargate Atlantis: Halcyon; and the Blood Angels duology Deus Encarmine and Deus Sanguinius.

In addition, Swallow's short fiction has appeared in Inferno! and Stargate magazine, the anthologies Star Trek Voyager: Distant Shores, the Doctor Who Short Trips collections Dalek Empire and Destination Prague, Something Changed, Collected Works, What Price Victory and Silent Night.

His non-fiction includes Dark Eye: The Films of David Fincher and books on writing, genre television and animation; he has also written for Star Trek: Voyager, Doctor Who and Space 1889, along with several scripts for audio and videogames.


Customer Reviews

Not a bad novel but....3
The characterization of the Blood Angels felt way off to me.
Too many little details detracted from the novel.
The structure and organization of the Blood Angels
was also a bit inaccurate in my opinion.

Since when were senior veteran Space Marines so
wishy washy....or so lacking in leadership?
How could Chapter Master Dante actually allow
an inquisitor of all ppl to be in overall command
of a company of Blood Angels to recover an artifact
tied to Sanguinus himself?
Where is the suspicion the Blood Angels should have
towards the inquisition?
Too many actions and decisions seemed way out of character.

The characters felt more like imperial guardsman than Astartes.
Also, how many companies were fielded in the novel?
It seems in each battle, dozens of Blood Angels were mowed down
and yet, they always seem to have dozens of more squads.
Last time i checked, there were about a hundred marines
to each company.

The novel in itself was decent as reflected by the 3 stars.
Still, the novel was somewhat weak because i found the
characters to be weak.

Flawed But Still Entertaining.3
Deus Encarmine is apparently James Swallow's first foray into the 40K universe and at times, his unfamiliarity with the setting shows. He does not appear to be as well versed with the background material as are some more familiar Black Library authors and as a result, he sometimes takes liberties with his story that long time Games Workshop fans might find a bit disconcerting. That having been said, Swallow does manage to craft a fairly engrossing tale.

Deus Encarmine chronicles a small band of Blood Angel space marines assigned to ceremonial garrison duty on an isolated cemetery world. When the planet is unexpectedly attacked by a determined force of Word Bearer chaos marines, the Blood Angels are aided by some comrades returning from a successful crusade to recover an ancient artifact belonging to the Blood Angel Chapter. Although the initial attack of the Word Bearers is blunted, the Blood Angels struggle internally with how to best address the continuing threat posed by the Word Bearers and how to best use the recently recovered artifact. Fueled in part by some old animosities and conflicts, different factions emerge and tensions arise which threaten to pit Blood Angel versus Blood Angel.

For the most part, Swallow's overall story is more sophisticated and nuanced than are his characters. Swallow admirably weaves together several different story arcs and the book benefits from layers of intrigue and betrayal. To the very end, readers are left guessing as to the true motivations and goals of the various main characters. Unfortunately, these characters still tend to remain relatively two dimensional and cliched. The bad guys tend to be angry, reflexively violent and downright psychotic while the good guys often come across as arrogant, aloof and overly pious. Swallows' battle scenes are a bit too simplistic with perhaps too heavy a focus on the blood and gore aspect and far too many casualties. Still, Deus Encarmine remains an entertaining light read and I found myself looking forward to the next installment in the series.

Blood Angels or not?4
I confess that I LOVE the Blood Angels. They're one of my favourite chapters of space marines, so I was really looking forward to this book. However, I must also confess that I was disappointed and even a little frustrated whilst reading this. The problem is not the writing (which is pretty good), and its not the plot (which, leaving a few niggles aside, is also pretty good). The problem is the fact that Swallow's Blood Angels are not the same as mine! I had such a strong image of them already, after all the background fluff published by BL, and Swallow seems to have interpreted it differently.
Sitting down after finishing the book, I realised that it wasn't fair to condemn this book simply for being written by someone who isn't me! In its own terms, this is an exciting and interesting read ... certainly worth your time (and a little cash). I'm even going to try the sequel ...