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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Darker than Eisenhorn
I read Eisenhorn (A Warhammer 40,000 Omnibus) a long time ago and then proceeded to read all kinds of Warhammer 40k books but I never got around to Ravenor.

I have to say that I missed out. Ravenor is definitely fantastic. I will tell you that the book is considerably darker, grittier, and more gothic dystopian than Eisenhorn. It's not for the faint of...
Published 22 months ago by Just Anonymous

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars More intrigue and heretic hunting from Dan Abnett
Ravenor is the follow-up to Dan Abnett's acclaimed Eisenhorn trilogy. Like the first trilogy it follows an Inquisitor hunting demon-worshiping heretics in the grim future of Warhammer 40,000 AD. And like Abnett's other books unless you're already up to speed on your Warhammer lore it will be a tough read.

Ravenor is one of the most powerful psychics in...
Published 22 months ago by Kid Kyoto


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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Darker than Eisenhorn, March 30, 2010
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This review is from: Ravenor: The Omnibus (Paperback)
I read Eisenhorn (A Warhammer 40,000 Omnibus) a long time ago and then proceeded to read all kinds of Warhammer 40k books but I never got around to Ravenor.

I have to say that I missed out. Ravenor is definitely fantastic. I will tell you that the book is considerably darker, grittier, and more gothic dystopian than Eisenhorn. It's not for the faint of heart.

I still think that Eisenhorn is probably the best starter novel for anyone looking at dabbling with Warhammer 40k but I think it's Ravenor where Dan Abnett truly delves into the dystopian aspects of society in the Imperium of Man. This is a dark and opressing book.

By now I've read a lot of Warhammer 40k books. I have to say that Eisenhorn is still my #1 book but Ravenor has immediately eclipsed all other works and taken it's place as the solid #2. Both Eisenhorn and Ravenor are not just my two favorites, they're my favorites by a very long long way.

This book is set in the Warhammer 40K Universe -- it's vast, rich, dystopian and on a scale as big as Star Wars, Star Trek, LOTR. I've been throwing a generic Warhammer40k Universe overview into my WH40K reviews for new reader. Here it is if you're interested:

GENERIC WARHAMMER 40K OVERVIEW
I'm adding a Warhammer 40K overview to this review to help newcomers get a sense for the Universe. (Warhammer 40K pros, go easy on me - I'm also somewhat of a newcomer to the Universe, hope I got the broad brushstrokes right). Review for book at bottom.

HOW I GOT HOOKED
I got this through vine and put it directly on my nightstand. Although I've never gamed Warhammer (Warhammer 40k Space Marines Combat Squad) or any of their many other games, I became a fan of Warhammer 40,000 after a friend in college introduced me to the Warhammer 40k universe back in 1990 I want to say. While browsing through Amazon, I came across Eisenhorn probably the best "starter" novel to get anyone started into the Warhammer Universe. I have to admit, I've gotten hooked on the stories.


THE BLACK LIBRARY
From a company standpoint there is a British company called the Black Library that owns and manages Warhammer 40K. They have some great writers on staff like Dan Abnett and Graham McNiell who write many of the stories. The common thread of the writers is that in my opinion they are very literary people who manage the capture the dark, dystopian, almost opressing vision of this far future. Many of their stories have foundations and parallels in real world history...for example The Flight of the Eisenstein (Horus Heresy) is very similar in my opinion to The Battleship Potemkin. I think the company was founded in 1989 to provide advanced hobbyist game pieces (Games Workshop Space Marine Devastator Squad Box Set) that gamers could paint and decorate and then play in competition based on some rule books called codexes (Warhammer 40K (40,000) Codex Space Marines) very similar to dungeons and dragons.


THE SERIES
Warhammer 40K takes place about 40,000 years in the future in a neogothic dystopian Universe where the entire galaxy has been colonized. During the 40,000 year history humanity discovers that hyperspace (the mechanism they use to travel faster than light) is filled with ghostly demons and other lifeforms that will not hesitate to invade and infest the real universe. Add to that alien Elves, Orks, intergalactic insectoid invaders, parasites and every other conceivable menace, this makes for a tormented universe that only knows War and suffering for its untold trillions or quadrillions of denizens.

In this Universe there is an Empire based on Earth with an Emperor and and a gigantic bureaucracy that manages the Imperium. I'll outline some of the story lines to help you make sense of this (if you're not a pro already):


SPACE MARINES - Genetically and Cybernetically augmented warrior monks that form the front line of defense for the Empire. Space Marine novels generally build on the mythology of the space marines and generally describe a chapter of space marines (a monastery) and tell some story of how they fight for the Empire or how they fell from grace. Space Marines are almost not human, they've been augmented genetically stand at 8 to 12 feet tall and wear giant powered armour. They fight in space and in some horrible conditions. For this reason, you don't get much of a feel for the denizens of the Empire (generally) in these novels. Space Marines are Monks and celibate (I think) so you don't get any flavor for interpersonal relationships. Although in a few stories you do get some political intrigue and in one space wolf novel, you even get to see Earth. Expect lots of fighting with these novels in very novel settings.
The Ultramarines Omnibus (Warhammer 40,000 Omnibus)


TITANS - The giant Mechwarriors (giant walking two legged tanks) that form the heaviest of assault machines of the empire. Titanicus is the only Warhammer 40K novel that I know of that is based on Titans. Because Titans stand at 40 stories and are crewed by a very select group of very religious people, you don't get much of the flavor for the citizens of the Empire although you do get dazzling descriptions of the cities, planets, and how the war machines fight. Expect lots of fighting with these novels.
Titanicus (Warhammer 40,000)

IMPERIAL GUARD - The Army of the Empire (untold billions serve and die regularly) -- CADIAN BLOOD is an Imperial guard novel. Expect down and dirty grunt fighting and warfare in these novels with a healthy does of intrigue and plot machinations. Because Imperial Guard are human, you get more of a sense for the Empire than you do with Titan or Space Marine novels.
Cadian Blood (Imperial Guard)

INQUISITORS - The Emperor's inquisition carries the Empire's complete support as they go out and seek out evil in any form (Einsenhorn, Ravenor, and Innocence Proves Nothing are Inquisition novels). Expect more intrigue and deceipt in these novels and expect to see some of the more opulent aspects of the Empire because many times Inquisitors walk among the citizens of the Empire. I find that I get a better flavor for the Warhammer Universe from Inquisitor Novels. They are my personal favorites.
Eisenhorn (A Warhammer 40,000 Omnibus)
Ravenor: The Omnibus (Warhammer 40000)
Innocence Proves Nothing (Warhammer 40000)

MECHANICUM - The Mechanicum is almost like a pseudoreligion based on Mars who has a very close alliance with the Emperor (although sometimes you wonder). The Mechanicum makes most of the technology for the Empire. So many things have been invented and forgotten in the 40K universe that technology is more of technomagic and technology use is almost ritual-like.
Mechanicum (Horus Heresy)

HORUS HERESY NOVELS - When the Warhammer 40K Universe was invented (mostly for gaming purposes), a backstory was developed that tells how the Galaxy was brought under the Emperor. It used to be a fairly short story but has been expanded broadly now that Warhammer 40K is so popular. Here are some Heresy books in no particular order but there is an order (there are too many of them for me to track and I haven't read them all).
Horus Rising (The Horus Heresy)
The Flight of the Eisenstein (Horus Heresy)
False Gods: The Heresy Takes Root (The Horus Heresy)



This is a Warhammer 40K book so it takes place in the 41st millenium, just FYI.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Twisty, turny, weird ending, August 17, 2009
I could hardly put this book down. It was my first foray into the Warhammer universe other than playing the video game Dawn of War. Dan Abnett does an awesome job of fleshing out a diverse, twisting story that spans a galaxy. The world is dark, violent and corrupt. The characters are complicated, believable and have secrets to keep.

The hero of the story, Ravenor, is a powerful Psyker/Telekine Inquisitor that has only the power of his mind to get him through situations as he has been entirely physically disabled. His mental communication with his team carries them through a variety of excitingly violent encounters as they hunt down Corruption Chaos and Heresy.

Various pieces of the big picture are thrown out across the three novels and two short stories that make up this omnibus. The reader doesn't start to see how things are fitting together until at least the second book. As pieces start to fall into place, the stakes keep getting higher and it sucks the reader in more and more.

My one lament, and the reason I gave this only four stars, is the ending. All of the main plot lines are pretty tidily wrapped up but it opens a question at the very end that is not answered. This may be so that fans of the tabletop games can play out characters without adhering to 'canon' that the book defines. However, in my opinion, this could have been done more gracefully. The other option is, maybe there is a sequel planned? Even if that is the case, the author could have done a better job of leaving a thread hanging without being annoying about it.

I have tried to write this review without spoiling the reader experience. This is a thrilling ride and definitely worth the purchase price. There is a lot of content in this omnibus! Even if you are new to the Warhammer universe (as I am), this is a great tale. If you are a fan I imagine it's just that much better.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another great storyline by the best writer in 40K, November 12, 2009
Dan Abnett has a heck of a reputation among the warhammer and 40k community, a very well earned one and in these books he dosn't disapoint.

The ravenor series is another inquistion based drama set out by a crippled powerful psyker who has played a major role in the previously written eisenhorn trillogy. Anyone who read the eisenhorn books could tell that ravenor was going to be someone special, and in these books he takes the center stage and we learn all about the world he fights to protect, even while being shut off of it for the rest of his life.

For those who have read many of the other abnett books you will find this one filled with his same gripping descriptions, inteligent intergration of secrets and lore but without the bogging down of so many technial and "gamey" terms or aspects that so many other authors suffer from. This is a great read up to par with all of the authors other work.

Perhaps the only thing that felt odd to me about the ravenor series was the mix between the gaunt ghosts and eisenhorn feel. While the generic idea is similar to eisenhorn, dealing heavily with the inquisition and being over a decent time gap, not to mention the coming and going of several interseting side characters, the flow of the book feels far more front line like the ghost novels. This is a book about the brutal secret forces and lost technology wraped around a inquisitors life, not so much a book about the bitter internal strugle of a man such as in the eisenhorn books.

Overall this is another great offer from GW and another amazing story by a trusted and much loved author.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A little less than Eisenhorn but still great book, August 8, 2011
I read Eisenhorn and then read Ravenor (waiting for the omnibus to come out).

This is a great book and has everything that makes Dan Abnet great - colorful characters, deceitfull villans and great psychic battles.

However, I just couldn't shake the feeling Eisenhorn was better. Maybe because it seemed Eisenhorn kept getting stronger and better from volume to volume (it's called evolution) while Ravenor stayed the same.

But don't be misled. This is a great book, perhaps Abnet's second best after Eisenhorn.
If u like the whk40000 universe, psychic combat and heros, this book is for you.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ravenor is great Dan Abnett, December 7, 2009
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I waited a few years after reading the excellent Eisenhorn triology to try this series as I wasn't sure Abnett could do it again. In-between books again I decided to give it a try and I was very pleased I did. This is classic Abnett and just as good as the Eisenhorn triology. It is certainly different than that, but just as entertaining and true to the 40k universe. The best way to read this triology is in the Omnibus and the preface was interesting and was in the back of my mind as I read the rest of the book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Better as a Whole, July 4, 2010
This review is from: Ravenor: The Omnibus (Paperback)
Let me first say that the Ravenor series was nowhere near as enjoyable to me as Abnett's Eisenhorn trilogy. This does not make it a bad book, in fact it is quite good in most aspects, but it had a lot to live up to and sadly fell short of the mark.

This omnibus follows the exploits of the Inquisitor Gideon Ravenor and his retinue as they pursue the maniacal Zygmunt Molotch. Rather than dealing with blistering space marine combat like most 40k fiction, this series deals with the shadowy hand of the Emperor's Holy Inquisition. The Inquisition is by far my favorite faction of the 40k universe, their adventures greatly vary and their enemies are often far more sinister than the average ork infestation. As said before Abnett's Eisenhorn series is a fantastic piece of literature and definitely beats out most other Black Library titles. Ravenor is Eisenhorn's protege, and so I expected this series to be as good if not better.

The thing that separates Ravenor from others is that he was crippled in a Chaos attack long ago. He is bound to a life-support chair. He can't physically apprehend the enemy but he is a psyker of formidable power. Because of his disability Ravenor must rely on his retinue, supporting characters with rough backgrounds that make them assets to the Inquisition. Some of these characters were present in the Eisenhorn series which makes for a bit of familiarity.

The focus of Ravenor's inquisitive mind and the efforts of his team is the villain Zygmunt Molotch, an evil genius. As far as villains go Molotch is a pretty good one, and there are others along the way. Lots of bullets are exchanged and a good many people die.

My major problem with this series is that, as an omnibus it works, but I feel that as individual books it falters. There books are somewhat divided but really work better as a whole. I couldn't imagine the frustration of reading the first and having to wait for the second and third. Another complaint of mine is that for a powerful psyker, Ravenor seems woefully inadequate. *spoiler* Ravenor fails to realize that there is a daemon occupying his inquisitor-in-training and his retinue is also joined by a member of the very school that trained his arch nemesis *end spoiler.*

The action is pretty decent but nothing spectacular, although the world descriptions are gripping and you can vividly imagine each character. The strongest aspect of this series is the characters. Each has his/her own flaws and strengths and history. Each character brings something unique to the team and this is what makes the Inquisition so interesting and effective. Also this series features my favorite 40k character ever, Wystan Frauka. Wystan is the comedic relief to the series. There is a dry sort of humor to him, and although he is not one of the main characters his presence adds a lot to the quality of the series.

Now as to the ending of the series. Either the ending was written the way it was by accident and thus is a weak conclusion to an otherwise solid story. Or the ending was written that way on purpose and is a brilliant anti-climax that can only make you truly appreciate Abnett's style. The last two lines "I told you closure was overrated" and "Its still closure" may be the worst or best lines ever delivered as summary. I choose to believe that it was a masterful stroke by Abnett and that's why this got 4 instead of 3 or 2 stars.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars More intrigue and heretic hunting from Dan Abnett, April 3, 2010
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Kid Kyoto (United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Ravenor: The Omnibus (Paperback)
Ravenor is the follow-up to Dan Abnett's acclaimed Eisenhorn trilogy. Like the first trilogy it follows an Inquisitor hunting demon-worshiping heretics in the grim future of Warhammer 40,000 AD. And like Abnett's other books unless you're already up to speed on your Warhammer lore it will be a tough read.

Ravenor is one of the most powerful psychics in the Imperium but has been confined to a life-support chair since a crippling injury early in his career. With his team of warriors he hunts the heretic Molotch from world to world foiling schemes and leaving a trail of destruction behind them.

As always with Abnett's books the worlds are imaginative and vividly described. Abnett can bring to life the Dickensian horrors of a slum world, hostile jungles and undersea caverns quickly and memorably.

But this book lacks compelling major characters. Unlike Eisenhorn, Ravenor has no real character progression, he remains the same ineffective, generally benevolent person throughout. He misses obvious clues and ignores threats within his own group for no real reason than to advance the plot. The villain Molotch is a super-genius. He begins as a genuine threat but by the end is so over-the-top he's laughable. In one scene he sits in a cafe booth displaying his intelligence. It begins with Sherlock Homes-style deductive reasoning (he's left handed, he's waiting for a business appointment) and ends with him explaining how he can destroy the planet's government six different ways without leaving his chair. It turns Molotch from a credible character to a comic book villain and destroys any interest I had in him.

The plot of the third book is especially poor. It brings in time travel and other science fiction cliches that feel out of place in the dark grim universe of Warhammer.

If you liked Eisenhorn definitely add a star, but before sitting down to read almost 900 pages, keep in mind this is not Abnett's best work.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Ravenor Omnibus, January 20, 2012
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This review is from: Ravenor: The Omnibus (Paperback)
Great read as far as 40k Novels are concerned. However, this needs to be compared to Abnett's Eisenhorn, his other inquistion trilogy. Ravenor has a much darker, dystopia feel and a large focus on psychic activities and psykers in general necessitated by Ravenor's physical state. For me, I did not find this as interesting as Eisenhorn's more physical exploits but the deeper exploration of Imperium society and how psykers operate was enlightening. Recommended reading.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great for the uninitiated!, December 24, 2011
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I don't know anything about Warhammer, 40K, or Dan Abnett, but after reading so many glowing reviews, I decided to give this one a try.

NOW I understand what everyone was raving about. The universe is vast, complicated and riveting. Characters are well drawn and cool. Plot twists abound and frequently took me by surprise. Perhaps most importantly, I enjoy the way Abnett writes. Very descriptive, clear and weighty.

Don't be turned off by the license, this is a Sci-Fi novel any fan can love. I wish I would have started reading them sooner. Also: this omnibus has a sweet cover (foil stamped).
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5.0 out of 5 stars Dark espionage, November 27, 2011
This review is from: Ravenor: The Omnibus (Paperback)
I was hesitant at first to read a book where the main character was disabled. Moastly becuse I thought I would be unable to connect with the character's plight. AS it turns out even though Ravenor is physicaly unable to move there is no need for him to. Ravenor is truly bad to the bone! Trus me he is not a person you want to mees with. I would say you don't want to meet him in a dark ally, but he could kick you behind from acroos the globe. And as it turns out the series is full of rich characters with there own backgounds and things they may want to hide. This is truly a winding tale to eliminate some people trading some very dark stuff. This is a spy novel at heart. Altough this spy stuff is not my norm I love the warhammer 40k series. I had never had any particular good fealings toward inquisitors, but Ravenor changed that. I decied to read this after picking up the Grey Knights series. It is worth your time. Now I am looking fforward to getting into Essilhorn.
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Ravenor: The Omnibus
Ravenor: The Omnibus by Dan Abnett (Paperback - July 28, 2009)
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