It seems to have been an age but finally
the action in the Horus Heresy has reached Sol. Nearly 50 books in and we are
finally approaching the end phase, the pieces are moving into position
and some minor retcons aside we are ready for the final battle. But while we
have been treated to tales aplenty featuring the Shattered Legions and the
other legions slowly making their way to Terra to defend the Emperor (though
Guilliman looks a bit suspect at the moment – surely he could have made it back
too?, After all Sangunius has to depart so why does the Avenging Son not go
with him?) we still have not seen much of what is happening back on Holy Terra
itself.
To be fair this is probably because most
of it has been destroying and rebuilding the Homeworld in preparation for
Horus’s final assault and some shorts aside that would not make for
particularly exciting reading. Nonetheless Dorn and his Legion are a big part
of the closing stages of the Horus Heresy and it seems only right that we check
in on them....
Just as they are attacked from within by
a small force of Alpha Legion operatives.
Yep, those sneaky sons of Alpharius
strike at Holy Terra itself. That said, it’s less of an actual attack and more
of a ‘look what we could do if we wanted to’ designed to distract Dorn. And it
works, although Dorn himself doesn’t get too involved in the hunt for the Alpha
Legion and instead assigns Archamus his chief Huscarl ‘the Praetorian of Dorn’
to take whatever resources he needs and hunt down the traitor elements wherever
in the solar system they may be. Of course this is the Alpha Legion that
we are talking about and they never make things that simple.
The narrative switches repeatedly between
the hunters and the hunted, showing the hunters attempts to track down their
quarry even as we see the traitors going about their objectives. Archamus
puts together his team to carry out his Primarchs orders and capture the
elusive Alpha Legion operatives and this is where the majority of the book
focuses although there are a few flashbacks for the Archamus and the lead Alpha
Legionnaire Silonius that add a little exposition and character development
suggesting, as always for the Alpha Legion that all is not as it seems.
In fact intrigue and mystery, as you
might expect, is a large part of the book with the side effect that the reader
can feel a little out of the loop as leaps in reasoning and logic are made that
we just cannot quite rationalise. It can make the book a little hard to follow
as events occur seemingly with little rhyme or reason. This can be a little
jarring and does unfortunately detract from the reading experience, though you
are never left completely lost sometimes things can be just a little too vague.
That said, I really do enjoy John
French’s writing, he has a way with words that I imagine a sculptor has with
clay and at times his writing borders on the romantic such is the elegance that
he uses in his prose. In many ways it almost has a classical element to it,
avoiding the ponderous overly descriptive format that many authors can fall
into the trap of using whilst simultaneously not making the text so basic that
it becomes mindless bolter porn.
The book also does a decent job on
highlighting two legions which have had scant attention paid to them over the
course of the Heresy, whilst by no means as neglected as some, it’s nice to see
the fists and Alpha Legion get some time in the spotlight and some good work is
done on them here.
However, even though there are some
excellent highlights and very important events at the back end of the book
(these are spoiler free reviews so I won’t say what, even though most people
probably know) It’s hard to say that Praetorian of Dorn is an essential read.
Certainly it feels like the narrative could have done with a little more
tightening and refining as the path the story takes is at times bumpy and
uneven. It’s a shame because if as much skill had been applied to construction
of the tale itself as to the craft of the text and writing we could have been
looking at a classic.
In the end though, despite some decent
characterisation and great action this is just another filler book, and whilst
it will certainly fit in the upper half of the series in terms of quality it
does come across as little more than another diversion, another obstacle placed
between us and the main event. Horus’s long awaited assault on Terra and
confrontation with the Emperor.
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