![]() ![]() But this, as they say, is Terra, and nothing survives the grinding poison, the secrets carried in the heart and worse, the knowledge that the Throne is failing… You can tell – she still looks healthy, has faith, and loves His Imperium. Credit: Gollancz Vaults of Terra – Chris Wraight Underhive and Cyberpunkĭreaming in Smoke, Tricia Sullivan. This week we’re breaking out of the Black Library, and I’ve had a think about some recommendations to build from some of the Black Library’s very, very best. ![]() If you’re someone who doesn’t read much outside Games Workshop, or Disney, or Paramount, or even Battletech and Gundam, take a step out there. You’d miss this, for example – the excellent art for the SF Masterworks edition of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Credit: Gollancz/Chris Mooreīlack Library fiction is cool and good, like a lot of tie in fiction, but there’s a lot of amazing Scifi out there. Unless you’re a voracious and extremely wealthy reader, you could probably start now and never read anything other than Warhammer 40k tie in fiction, forever. Millions, upon millions, of words about the 40k universe from hundreds of authors and contributors ranging from SF stalwarts to fresh ingenues and GW staffers. Since the publication of Inquisitor (now better known as Draco) in 1990, the Black Library has opened impossibly wide and the Harlequins have produced near enough 1,000 novels, audiobooks and graphic novels for the 40k Universe. Let’s start out with what we know: Warhammer 40k. Best mystery novels never read series#Welcome back! Last time we strapped into the rocket, hit ignition and headed out into the void of Classic Scifi, and now it’s time to put the series to the test – can we actually get you reading some of these incredibly awesome books that are weighing down my shelves and threatening my sanity with their endless whispering? ![]()
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