Space Marine

Necromunda Space Marine 1993

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First published in 1993 – though completed some years earlier – at a time when the background to the Warhammer 40,000 universe was still in a state of flux and not yet fully coalesced, the book follows three young Imperial Fist recruits from their formative years in the underhive gangs of Necromunda through to fighting as part of the First Company within the bowels (literally!) of a Tyranid bioship.

Not only will you find squats in this novel –Tzeentch-worshiping squats at that – but also Space Marines controlling Titans, Space Marines with lasguns, the Pain Glove and more than a small amount of toilet humour. Oh, and a Zoat. How could we forget the Zoat?

Although the temptation was great to rewrite significant portions of this book to make it conform to current background, as a curiosity piece, an historical snapshot of the Warhammer 40,000 universe circa the early 1990s, this book is invaluable. It also serves as a shining example of what can happen when a respected genre author at the height of his powers is let loose on an established shared universe.
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When the publisher, Black Library, says: "Believe us when we tell you that Space Marine is quite unlike any other Warhammer 40,000 novel you’ve ever read." They really aren't kidding. This was written at the time when GW was still in it's infancy in space. They really had just taken their fantasy line and dropped it in space and it shows.
The book itself is kinda split into 3 books within it. It starts on Necromunda at the time that the Confrontation rules were being developed (and man were those complicated!!). This is what drew me to the book as I am a huge Necromunda fan. You get a glimpse of how Necromunda was envisioned at the time and that's awesome. It quickly goes to the recruitment of 3 gangers which shows how the Imperial Fists increased their ranks. This was probably the most interesting part of the book, being given an initiate look at the recruitment and training process of a Chapter.
The second and third books see our heros (anti-heros?) chasing down an arch-heretic across multiple theaters of battle. There is an epic Titan battle that the characters take a direct part in. Tunnel fighting with Ambull riding squats. Even a run in with Chaos (and I'm very glad that GW went the sexual path for Slaneesh instead of how it depicted in these books!).
Well worth the read, even it is really odd.