
Luther: First of the Fallen
The Horus Heresy
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Narrado por:
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Andrew James Spooner
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De:
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Gav Thorpe
A Horus Heresy novel
Hero. Villain. Protector. Destroyer. Loyal. Fallen. Luther embodies the duality at the heart of the Dark Angels – but what is his story? Prepare to find out....
Listen to It Because
Get new insights into one of the key figures of the Horus Heresy, who shaped the destiny of the Dark Angels for 10 millennia, in a new novel by the master of First Legion fiction, Gav Thorpe.
The Story
Knight of the Angelicasta. Saviour of the Lion. Grand Master of the Order. Lord of the Dark Angels. Protector of Caliban. Chaos Heretic. Destroyer of Caliban. Sorcerer of the Abyss. Arch-traitor. Dark Oracle. First of the Fallen.
Can one man be all of these things?
Kept alive and imprisoned for 10,000 years, Luther is the curse and the salvation of the Dark Angels made manifest. None are so close to the heart and history of the Chapter as the man that embodies all that was great about the First Legion and all that is shameful about the Dark Angels. In his story is writ the tale of the Horus Heresy and the fall from Enlightenment in a single long life. Glory, honour, pride, shame and betrayal weave a tapestry of truth and lies that the Supreme Grand Masters of the Dark Angels have sought to understand and unbind across 10 bloody millennia. Luther claims repentance for his past deeds, but was it his sins that condemned the Chapter to its secretive fate, or should warnings from history have been more closely heeded?
Written by Gav Thorpe. Narrated by Andrew James Spooner.
©2021 Games Workshop Limited (P)2021 Games Workshop LimitedListeners also enjoyed...




















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An excellent performance and a refreshing perspective
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Luther teaches lessons while imprisoned
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Good book with an interesting moments.
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One of the best books
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This is the best insight into the history and progression of the First that I've ever read, and it added so much depth to the character of Luther, who I previously felt to be a more flat villain.
The structure of the book is excellent, providing insights into the history of Caliban and the Dark Angels chapter through Luther's various tales, and while it does so, it also tells the reader a lot about the Chapter's regression through the use of a line of Supreme Grandmasters.
Seriously, if you're interested in the lore and want a look at what could be in store for the future for the First, give this a listen.
Andrew James Spooner also does a stellar job narrating! I couldn't have asked for more.
Must-Read for Dark Angels Fans
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A must listen
wooooooooo.
I am Dave oh yeah
Legions astarte boy
Luther the Immortal
Dope
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Just excellent 👌
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Luther
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engaging recall narrative
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Some of his books are among the best of the Horus heresy, like deliverance loss or angels of Caliban. Others are so terrible that I really wish I had never read it, like Indomitus, his eldar novels, or some of his varied Dark Angel shorts.
It seems like black library had intended this book to bridge a number of different weak points in the lore of the genesis of the dark angels.
If this was the mission, than the author accomplished it very solidly.
The author has a bad habit however of making a straw man out of characters that are not ones your supposed to like.
The effect is that many of the stories are 2 dimensional until you reach 1 or 2 characters.
Presuming the previous mission, the author had a tough task, but used the vehicle of Luther as an effective bridge across seeming chasms of unwritten lore.
There are a few very difficult parts to the book however, these parts are shared with other books recently from black library generally and Gav particularly.
The forcing of politically correct agendas is really not necessary in the grim darkness of the 41st millennium. Nobody likes to be subtly or unsubtly propagandised, I really don't need female nights running around when that was never integral to the story.
In fact, it's kind of a put off. They are not any historical evidences of this happening anywhere in human history. It is just a modern political agenda that will pass later. It makes the work have less staying power and appeal ability.
Have and black library both have been pushing similar agendas with gender nonconformity, female empowerment, and how evil religion is.
S is really irritating and nobody really enjoys it. It is tolerated, not enjoyed.
Jumping onto that bandwagon, Gav also loves to permeate the work with the idea that everything is meaningless and there is no right or wrong.
Being a veteran of black library, the warhammer universe generally, and all sorts of similar fiction, this is one of the most annoying tropes out there is fiction.
It is a small minded, internally invalid outlook the defeats itself simply on its statement. I am not advocating one or another value set per se, but damn seems to love the depressing and meaningless angles in his characters.
Why does a character do any one thing instead of another thing if there is no hope of anything positive in the end? Gav doesn't know, or at least he doesn't seem to write anything.
That is why this is so strange about this particular book. The reader is hopeful of some kind of information contributing to the overall storyline of the dark angels. This keeps us turning the pages.
In this book, Gav understands that very well, which is why the book was very readable.
It seems strange that gave does not extend this understanding to characters in his books.
That being sad, Gav's work in this book is above average and is generally very solid.This is mostly because the subject is compelling and we really want to advance the overall storyline in the 40K universe.
He narrator, Mr. Spooner, did a phenomenal job! It is fairly rare to have a reader do so well that I have not heard before in 40k audios, but he did quite well. Hats off!
Way better then Gav's last book
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