Thursday, June 26, 2008

Gorilla Review - Horus Rising - Book One Of The Horus Heresy


The Res Gestae:
For those of you who don't know, Warhammer 40,000 is a SciFi game, set in the 41st millennium and featuring the wars between the various factions (11 or so) vying for domination. The game uses miniature figurines of warriors, creatures and vehicles and are produced by Games Workshop. Games Workshop also produces collectible game cards.

In about 2005, the richness of the fictional Warhammer 41st millennium universe started to expand when the Black Library (a section of BL Publishing which, as you might imagine, is a division of Games Workshop Ltd) authors began to in-fill the history leading up to Warhammer 40,000.

According to the Imperium's history, by the 25th millennium man had dispersed outward through the universe inhabiting a huge number of widely dispersed planets. Travel to these far-flung worlds was accomplished through the "warp", a dimensionally distorted space analogous to a worm-hole. The scientific advances necessary to make these voyages were made during the "Age of Technology" beginning in the 15th millennium and ending in the 25th millennium. During the Age of Technology, mutants, called Navigators, were created by means of gene engineering to assist in passage making though the warp. Once started, the spread of mankind throughout the universe was very rapid.

At the height of this diaspora the warp filled with disturbances and became unusable for some five thousands years. Isolated from its satellite worlds, Terra, descended into anarchy and entered its "Age of Strife."

When the warp finally cleared, the earth was under the rule of a single emperor referred to as "The Immortal Emperor of Man" or "The Emperor of Mankind." The Emperor's true name is unknown. He was born in the 8th millennium AD, somewhere in Anatolia to normal human parents. The basis of the Emperor's immortality isn't clear, but his involvement in human affairs becomes known when he emerges as a warlord of the techno-barbarian warriors and unifies the planet earth in the 30th millennium.

The unification of earth and the clearing of the warp appear to have coincided. After consolidating his control over Terra, the Emperor launched the Great Crusade in which he and his cohorts would return to the far flung worlds and consolidate all of the human race under his solitary leadership whether they wanted it or not. Xenos would be annihilated.

Using his own genes, the Emperor engineered 20 of his offspring into superhuman beings called Primarchs. Each Primarch, in turn, used their own genes to create the legions (their own offspring) they would command. The Emperor was cast as the savior of the human race, whose only purpose was to serve and protect.


The 20 Genetically Engineered Primarchs:
1. Alpharius Omegon - Primarch of the Alpha Legion.
2. Angron - Primarch of World Eaters.
3. Corax - Primarch of Raven Guard.
4. Ferrus Manus - Primarch of the Iron Hands.
5. Fulgrim - Primarch of the Emperor's Children.
6. Horus - Warmaster, Commander In Chief of the Emperor's legions, and Primarch of the Luna Wolves/Sons of Horus.
7. Jaghatai Khan - Primarch of the White Scars.
8. Konrad Curze - Primarch of the Night Lords.
9. Leman Russ - Primarch of the the Space Wolves.
10. Lion El'Jonson - Primarch of the Dark Angels.
11. Logar - Primarch of the Word Bearers.
12. Magnus The Red - Primarch of the Thousand Sons.
13. Mortarion - Primarch of the Death Guard.
14. Perturabo - Primarch of the Iron Warriors.
15. Roboute Guilliman - Primarch of the Ultramarines.
16. Rogal Dorn - Primarch of the Imperial Fists.
17. Sanguinius - Primarch of the Blood Angels.
18. Vulkan - Primarch of the Salamanders.
19. Unknown - Information missing from the history.
20. Unknown - Information missing from the history.


The Great Crusade:
The objective of the Great Crusade was to "liberate" the human race by bringing it to the truth. Which meant bringing each of the settled worlds of the universe into the Imperium so that the vast mass of humanity could reach its full potential and enjoy its birthright (dominion over the universe).

One aspect of the Imperium's "truth" was its complete secularism. The Imperium denied the existence of God and the supernatural. According to the Imperium, there was nothing that could not be defined and/or explained in full by science and nature. Belief systems which taught the existence of demons, gods, spirits and supernatural forces were perceived to be patent frauds used for the sole purpose of subjugating humans.

After two hundred years of total war the Emperor promoted his offspring Horus to the position of Warmaster or Commander In Chief of the Emperor's legions. After making this appointment the Emperor returned to Terra ostensibly to administer his now massive Imperium.


The Horus Heresy:
It is the events following the appointment of Horus as Warmaster which are documented in the Black Library books. Each book is a chapter in the story leading up to Warhammer 40,000. The chapters (listed in order of occurrence) written to date are:

1. Horus Rising, (The seeds of heresy are sewn) by Dan Abnett
2. False Gods, (The heresy takes root) by Graham McNeill
3. Galaxy In Flames, (The heresy revealed) by Ben Counter
4. The Flight of The Eisenstein, (The heresy unfolds) by James Swallow
5. Fulgrim, ( Visions of treachery) by Graham McNeill
6. Descent of Angels, (Loyalty and honour) by Mitchel Scanlon
7. Legion, (Secrets and lies) by Dan Abnett


Horus Rising, by Dan Abnett
Horus Rising opens in the 203rd year of the Great Crusade. Horus had been appointed Warmaster a year earlier after his victory over the Greenskins at Ullanor.

The Luna Wolves Legion (The 63rd Expedition force) and their Primarch, Horus. translated by accident into a system of 9 planets. At the edge of the system they encountered a gathering of warships. The Emperor first demanded of their intent and unsatisfied with their response he demanded fealty and explained he was the savior of mankind and that it was his purpose to reunite all humans where ever they might be located.

The Emperor's envoys were murdered out of hand and as a result the Luna Wolves Legion of Astarte warriors dressed in Mark IV power armor plate, attacked and decimated the resistence.
At the time of the attack, Garviel Loken, a Captain of the 10th Company of the Luna Wolves was leading the First Squad, Tenth Company of the genetically enhanced Imperial Astartes and was racing against troops led by the First Captain Ezekyle Abaddon for the privilege of capturing the false emperor in his own palace on the world designated as sixty-three nineteen.

Loken wins the race with Abaddon and catches up to the false emperor in the tallest of the palace towers. In the few minutes Loken had with the false emperor, the man argued that if their philosophies were so far apart the Astartes could have simply left them alone instead of making war on their human brothers.

The statement causes the first crack in the Crusade's harsh policy of fealty or submission. The wedge in the crack are the implied concepts of coexistence and tolerance. Loken is eventually bothered enough to bring the matter to his friend Sindermann, an iterator, who is adept at repeating and explaining the Imperium's philosophy. The iterators are the apologists of the Imperium.

About three months after the battle for the High City, Tarik Torgaddon, Captain of the Luna Wolves' 2nd Company, carries an invitation to Loken to join the Mournival. According to the tradition of the Luna Wolves, four of the captains are chosen to act as an informal group or Mournival to watch over the moral health of the legion and to shape its philosophy. Loken's appointment The members of the Mournival are First Captain, Ezekyle Abaddon, 2nd Company Captain Tarik Torgaddon, 5th Company Captain Horus Aximand, and 10th Company Captain Garviel Loken.

After his appointment to the Mournival, Loken commits his 10th Company to the suppression of resurgents on planet sixty-three nineteen in a forbidding mountainous area called the Whisperheads.

Deep within the recesses of the mountains Loken and the iterator, Sindermann, encounter the disembodied voice of something called Samus. Samus possesses the mind of Loken's brother Astartes, Jubal, and Loken is forced to kill his friend.

The experience is shattering for Loken because it seems to be direct evidence of possession by a demon or evil spirt. This is a troublesome contradiction of the precepts of the Imperium which disclaims anything spiritual. Even the iterator, Sindermann is at a loss. The First Captain, Abaddon, tries to explain the incident as the result of a deadly virus that robbed Jubal of his mind. Loken is uncomfortable with the explanation.

Eventually Horus himself meets with Loken and shares a dark secret. There are dimensionally distorted entities within the warp who at times reach out and affect the living. Horus explains that even the Immortal Emperor doesn't fully understand the warp and a complete understanding of the warp is one of the tasks the Emperor has set himself.

The sixty third expedition is distracted from its Crusade by the distress calls of the Blood Angels legion which has landed on a planet later named, Murder. Horus and his Luna Wolves take up positions above the planet and following the edicts of the Immortal Emperor they wage war on the non-human inhabitants they have named megarachnid. The megarachnid are giant intelligent armored spiders. They are fearless implacable enemies. After six months of total war the Astartes are joined above the planet by the warships of the interex.

The interex are human and they have advanced to a high level. Cut off from the rest of humanity the interex have learned to coexist with alien races and do not wage war unless forced to. The interex had been responsible for imprisoning the megaarachnid on Murder and depriving them of interstellar travel. The interex had placed beacons around Murder warning travelers that it was a prison planet. Horus views the Imperium's inability to understand these beacons as a serious mistake. He is rapidly coming to the belief that the Imperium's mandate wage war and destroy all xenos must be less blind and more context driven.

Horus' new thinking causes him to attempt diplomacy with the interex rather than the standard fealty or subjugation approach. In the end, we learn the interex are concerned that Horus and his Astartes warriors have been possessed by what they call the evil of Kaos (the interex version of the warp).

The interex's suspicions seem to be confirmed when a very deadly knife called an anathame is stolen from their Hall of Devices museum. The anathame is supposedly made of a sentient metal crafted by an ancient alien race called the kinebrach. When the blade is dedicated to a specific target it becomes the complete nemesis of the person or being targeted. (Again there is seeming evidence of a spirit world.)

To the interex the theft is evidence of the Imperium's infection by Kaos. Horus believes the interex to be mistaken about the theft and unsuccessfully tries to avoid hostilities. In the end Horus is forced to declare war on the interex.

Unknown to all but the reader, Erebus, First Chaplain of the Word Bearers Legion was the thief who stole the anathame. We are left wondering if Kaos is involved, how if at all the mounting evidence contradicting the Imperium's teachings will affect Horus, and who the intended victim of the anathame might be.

The answers will have to wait until we read, False Gods, by Graham McNeill.


Finitus:
The world of the Imperium is truly rich with detail. The writing is some of the best we read, and the oddly British feel of the text only adds to its beauty. We give Horus Rising a whole two thumbs up and recommend it highly.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Gorilla Review - Part 3, Francis Pennyworth, Jr.



Gorilla Review:
When we last spoke you were going to give us some examples of this asymmetric conflict you were describing.


Pennyworth:
Alright, without giving away the last chapter of my book an example might be Hezbollah. Is Hezbollah acting as a proxy for another country? We know it receives military and financial aid from both Syria and Iran, but who does it work for? Both countries deny that Hezbollah is their proxy in Lebanon. Does Syria or Iran, for that matter, work for another country? Are Russia and China involved? Maybe. North Korea is a known proxy of China, and North Korea may have transferred nuclear technology to Syria. What has Russia transferred to Iran? We know Russia's been interested in the middle east for at least 50 years.


Our troops in Iraq are being killed with Iranian explosives. Hezbollah is using Syrian and Iranian munitions in Lebanon. Egyptian terrorists trained in Lebanon are passing through Syria into Iraq. Is an independent Palestine a goal or a stalking horse? To say that the picture is confused would be an understatement!


Gorilla Review:
What was the name of your book again?


Pennyworth:
I'll be finished in another month or so, then I'll let you know the title and where the work can be obtained.


Gorilla Review:
What format will it be published in?


Pennyworth:
I like the 6 x 9 trade format. It's a little easier on the eyes than the pocket book. I also like eBooks without the restriction of digital rights. Adobe PDF is a good format. It's a portable and readable cross platform format. I'm currently leaning toward ElectricRead.com. They work with Lulu.com and can provide print-on-demand capability. Of course, distribution with Lulu includes the standards like Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, etc.


Gorilla Review:
Sounds good, we'll check back with you in a month or so.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Gorilla Review - Part 2, Francis Pennyworth Jr. Interview


Here we are again with Francis Pennyworth, underground author and playwright.



Pennyworth: The similarities between today's Islamic fascists and Hitler's brand of fascism and his methodology for acquiring and maintaining power are more than passing. But, before I go any further it must be made clear that we are not talking about the whole of Islam, but rather the fascist groups within it. Just as all Christians aren't crusaders, all Muslims aren't fascist. With that caveat in mind, I recommend the reader take the time to do some internet research. It only takes a few minutes to find ample evidence of the links between Hitler's Germany and the middle east. In fact, I devote an entire chapter to this issue. All the research is done and the cites are there.



Gorilla Review: Somehow that sounds inflammatory.



Pennyworth: Again, we are not talking about the entirety of the Muslim world. Still it is what it is. The links between Hitler's Germany and Iran, Iraq, Syria, and the Palestinians etc. are clear and convincing. The similarities in methodology between today's Islamic radicals and the Nazis are more than passing. The danger here is not just to Christians and Jews. This new fascist threat is aimed at all peoples, of all races, and all creeds who cherish their freedom.



Gorilla Review: Can you give us some specific examples?



Pennyworth: Sure. Hitler's playbook calls for the selling of a scapegoat which allegedly is responsible for the target populace's loss of greatness. Unfortunately, the Jews have now been selected twice. Hitler also called for a near religious fervor because he believed that only a religious fervor will produce the requisite level of violence. Of course we all know about the concept of Jihad. Hitler was also deep into propaganda. He believed the message had to be simple enough to be understood by the dumbest guy in the population and it had to be repeated as many times as possible.



Today we're seeing concerted propaganda efforts aimed at the young and the disenfranchised. Everything from religious schools preaching hatred to video games depicting the slaughter of Israelis and children's cartoons showing murder as a good thing. There is a massive propaganda effort under way to paint all non Muslims as evil and we're asleep at the switch.



Gorilla Review: We hear a lot about Islamic fascists, but who are the bad guys really?



Pennyworth: The problem here is we are involved in an asymmetric conflict with multiple enemies, none of whom are what they appear to be. In other words the water is really muddy. Let me give you some examples.



To be continued...

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Gorilla Review - Part 1, Francis Pennyworth, Jr. Interview


We recently had an opportunity to interview an underground author by the name of Francis Pennyworth, Jr. We were impressed, to say the least.


Mr. Pennyworth's current project, "Connect The Dots" deals with the swirling, tangled mess that is the middle east and in particular the activities of what Mr. Pennyworth calls the Islamic fascists.


Gorilla Review: Why did you choose this particular topic for your next work?


Pennyworth: I spend a lot of my time discussing current events with just about anyone who will listen. And, as we distance ourselves from 9/11, I have noticed a growing lack of awareness concerning middle east events. When it comes to the history of the region the outright ignorance is shocking. This ignorance is even reflected in the behavior of our elected officials - people who should know better. I wanted to do something to spark an awareness of the real and present danger around us.


Gorilla Review: That seems like a tall order. How can you do that in a single work?


Pennyworth: The truth is you can't. When I began this project it was my intention to simply report on events in Lebanon so as to highlight certain facts about the organization known as Hezbollah. The purpose being to bring some clarity to a muddy and often misrepresented situation. However, it soon became obvious that a discussion of Hezbollah in the absence of some discussion of Iran and Syria would be grossly incomplete. Of course a discussion of those two countries, as well as, the major non-state actors had to be placed within the greater context of the religion of Islam. To complete the picture it was also necessary to place the whole of the Middle East into at least a minimal historical focus. Although I have attempted to do all of this in the simplest, most straightforward way possible, a project initially intended to be nothing more than a pamphlet has grown to the size of a small novel. Of course, anything but the most cursory discussion would fill a small library. As it is each chapter is turning out to be a precis for a book.


Gorilla Review: Sounds complicated. Have you come to any conclusions you can share with us?


Pennyworth: Absolutely. For one, there are verifiable similarities between today's Islamic fascists and Hitler's Nazis.


To be continued...