![]() Horus is presented as such a gentle, noble, and ethical warrior in Book I, his heel-turn in Book II seems practically out of the blue. Yet, despite Erubus looking and acting like a pantomine villain, and Horus having his own brother standing there pointing this out to him, Horus still decides to betray everyone, his oaths, his ethics, all because.what? The Emperor didn't tell him everything? That's hardly a good enough reason. For years, fans have been clamouring for novels about the Horus Heresy - the bloody civil war that set Space Marine against Space Marine and nearly spelled the end of mankind at the hands of. We continue with the captivating world of Warhammer 40,000 with our book recap summary of Graham McNeills False Gods, the second book in the iconic Horus Heresy series. ![]() If that was all, then what compelled Horus to give in? Surely a warrior like him wasn't so afraid of death that he would have done anythign to avoid that? There's no indication of such a deep character flaw either before, or during the warp vision The Emperor of mankind has handed the reins of command to. ![]() I got the impression the only sorcery being done was a barrier, to prevent outside interference, and the spell to send Erebus into the Warp to take Horus on his vision quest. The Great Crusade that has taken humanity into the stars continues. ![]() Yes, he was injured and in the Serpent Lodge, but I didn't understand what they were actually doing to him. ![]() I've just finished reading False Gods and I was struck by how seemingly easily Horus fell. ![]()
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