
Ahriman: Sorcerer
Ahriman: Warhammer 40,000, Book 2
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Narrated by:
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Mark Elstob
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By:
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John French
Book two in the Ahriman series.
Ahriman, greatest sorcerer of the Thousand Sons and architect of the Rubric that laid his Legion low, continues to walk the path towards salvation, or damnation. Searching for a cure for his Legion, he is forced to consider - was the great ritual somehow flawed from the very beginning?
Listen to it because:
This is the second part in the tale of one of Warhammer 40,000's most notorious villains. The Ahriman series explores the motivations of this dark sorcerer in greater depth than ever before. Horus Heresy fans will also find plenty to enjoy as the story harks back to events of this great civil war, particularly the fate of the lost Book of Magnus.
The story:
Ahriman, greatest sorcerer of the Thousand Sons and architect of the Rubric that laid his Legion low, continues to walk the path towards salvation, or damnation. Searching for a cure for his Legion, he is forced to consider - was the great ritual somehow flawed from the very beginning? The answer may lie within the mysterious artefact known as the Athenaeum of Kalimakus, a grimoire of forgotten knowledge that is reputed to contain the exact words of the lost Book of Magnus...or, perhaps, even a transcription of the primarch’s deepest and most secret thoughts.
Written by John French. Audiobook narrated by Mark Elstob.
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What a rollercoaster!
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Questions piled on questions.
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amazing work! as usual.
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#MagnusDidNothingWrong
All is dust
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Fantastic
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The beginning is kind of a love it leave it sort of style of writing, there are a bunch of moving parts that need to get into place for the end to make sense and is a slow burn. Once it got going I was fully engaged and stayed that way for a while.
All is dust
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Thousands Sons fans delight.
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good story, but very just ok narrator
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Definitely not a fan of the narrator
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The narrations and voice acting were amazing. While I PERSONALLY still do not agree with the voice chosen for Ahriman himself, Mark Elstob simply did a fantastic job. Every character has as a unique a voice as one man can try to give, allowing you to easily tell who is speaking regardless of how you feel about the voice itself. And the small handful of points where he transitions from one voice to another mid-sentence were expertly done.
If I have to give a major criticism, it would be with the final segments. To me it felt like it was all a grand "All according to plan" moment with little to no explanation OF said plan or how it was set up to that point. Maybe I missed some things, but as events unfolded I was wondering how Ahriman devised his schemes? How did he know what to set up for things to go the way he wanted? The only point I can think of in his defense here is earlier on in the book where he explains the Psyker ability to look into the future and how it works. So, yes, he COULD see how events might unfold and plan accordingly; but I personally would have liked more detail. More hints as to what he might be seeing and scheming. I would have LOVED to revel in the feeling of all the pieces falling into place by being able to think back and realize when they were set up to begin with.
The final chapters were...
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