Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
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Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
En octobre prochain (octobre 2011) sortira un roman inédit des Fantôme de Gaunt : Salvation's Reach, dont voici une présentation.
==> SALVATION'S REACH de Dan Abnett
The Tanith First-And-Only embark on a desperate mission that could decide the fate of the Sabbat Worlds Crusade in the thirteenth book of this popular Imperial Guard series.
The Ghosts of the Tanith First-and-Only have been away from the front line for too long. Listless, and hungry for action, they are offered a mission that perfectly suits their talents. The objective: the mysterious Salvation’s Reach, a remote and impenetrable stronghold concealing secrets that could change the course of the Sabbat Worlds campaign. But the proposed raid is so hazardous, it’s regarded as a suicide mission, and the Ghosts may have been in reserve for so long they’ve lost their edge. Haunted by spectres from the past and stalked by the Archenemy, Colonel-Commissar Gaunt and his Ghosts embark upon what could be their finest hour… or their final mission.
Le Premier et Unique de Tanith se lance dans une mission désespérée qui pourrait décider du sort de la croisade des mondes de Sabbat, dans le treizième roman de cette série populaire de la Garde Impériale.
Les Fantômes du Premier et unique de Tatnith ont été éloignés de la ligne de front pendant trop longtemps. Apathiques et affamés d'action, ils s'offrent une mission qui convient parfaitement à leurs talents. L'objectif: atteindre le mystérieux Salut , un bastion de secrets éloigné et impénétrable qui pourrait changer le cours de la campagne des mondes de Sabbat. Mais le raid proposé est dangereux, il est considéré comme une mission suicide, et les fantômes ont été en réserve si longtemps qu'ils ont perdu leur avantage. Hantés par les spectres du passé et traqués par l'ennemi juré, le colonel-commissaire Gaunt et ses Fantômes se lancent dans ce qui pourrait être leur heure de gloire ... ou de leur dernière mission.
Et en bonus, voici un extrait en anglais de ce futur roman !
(Source = le blog officiel de Dan Abnett Blog de Dan Abnett )
==> SALVATION'S REACH de Dan Abnett
The Tanith First-And-Only embark on a desperate mission that could decide the fate of the Sabbat Worlds Crusade in the thirteenth book of this popular Imperial Guard series.
The Ghosts of the Tanith First-and-Only have been away from the front line for too long. Listless, and hungry for action, they are offered a mission that perfectly suits their talents. The objective: the mysterious Salvation’s Reach, a remote and impenetrable stronghold concealing secrets that could change the course of the Sabbat Worlds campaign. But the proposed raid is so hazardous, it’s regarded as a suicide mission, and the Ghosts may have been in reserve for so long they’ve lost their edge. Haunted by spectres from the past and stalked by the Archenemy, Colonel-Commissar Gaunt and his Ghosts embark upon what could be their finest hour… or their final mission.
Le Premier et Unique de Tanith se lance dans une mission désespérée qui pourrait décider du sort de la croisade des mondes de Sabbat, dans le treizième roman de cette série populaire de la Garde Impériale.
Les Fantômes du Premier et unique de Tatnith ont été éloignés de la ligne de front pendant trop longtemps. Apathiques et affamés d'action, ils s'offrent une mission qui convient parfaitement à leurs talents. L'objectif: atteindre le mystérieux Salut , un bastion de secrets éloigné et impénétrable qui pourrait changer le cours de la campagne des mondes de Sabbat. Mais le raid proposé est dangereux, il est considéré comme une mission suicide, et les fantômes ont été en réserve si longtemps qu'ils ont perdu leur avantage. Hantés par les spectres du passé et traqués par l'ennemi juré, le colonel-commissaire Gaunt et ses Fantômes se lancent dans ce qui pourrait être leur heure de gloire ... ou de leur dernière mission.
Et en bonus, voici un extrait en anglais de ce futur roman !
(Source = le blog officiel de Dan Abnett Blog de Dan Abnett )
At midnight, local time, a new star woke in the skies above Anzimar. The city’s population was hurrying to attend the day’s Sabbat Libera Nos service, which had been held in the temples of the Beati every midnight since the Crusade began, in the hope of vouchsafing a brighter tomorrow. Some of the hundreds of thousands of citizens bustling from their homes, or even their beds, or suspending their labour, at that time may have turned their eyes skywards, for since the very origin of the species, mankind has entertained the notion that some ineffable source of providence may look down upon us. The upward glances were vain, involuntary wishes to glimpse the face of salvation.
No one saw the star light up. The smog that night was as thick as rockcrete.
Ship bells rang. At high anchor at the edge of the mesopause, the Imperial Tempest Class frigate Highness Ser Armaduke lit its plasma engines. The drives ignited with a pulsing fibrilation, and then calmed into a less intense, steady glow.
Below the ship lay the troposphere and the stratosphere. The shadow of the terminator lay heavily across Menazoid Sigma, and the smog atmospherics were so dense there were no visible light concentrations from the night-side hives. Part of the world was in sunlight. The fetid clouds, brown and cream, looked like infected brain tissue.
Small ships buzzed around the Armaduke, like flies around a carcass. Fleet tenders nestled in close to its flanks. Launches, lighters, cargo boats and shuttles zipped in and out. The Armaduke’s hatches were all wide open, like the beaks of impatient hatchlings. Entire sections of the frigate’s densely armoured hull plate had been peeled back or retracted to permit access. The old ship, ancient and weathered, looked undignified, like a grandam mamzel caught with her skirts hoisted.
Above the ship lay the exosphere. The vacuum was like a clear but imperfect crystal, a window onto the hard blackness of out-system space and the distant glimmer of tiny, malicious stars.
The Highness Ser Armaduke was an old ship. It was an artifact of considerable size. All ships of the fleet are large. The Armaduke measured a kilometre and a half from prow to stern, and a third of that dimension abeam across the fins. Its realspace displacement was six point two megatonnes, and it carried thirty-two thousand four hundred and eleven lives, including the entire Tanith First and its regimental retinue. It was like a slice cut from a hive, formed into a spear-head shape, and mounted on engines.
It was built for close war. Its hull armour was pitted and scorched, and triple-thickness along the flanks and the prow. The prow cone was rutted with deep scars and healed damage. The Armaduke was of a dogged breed of Imperial ship that liked to get in tight with its foe, and was prepared to get hurt while it hurt and killed an enemy.
To Ibram Gaunt, closing towards it about one of the last inbound launches, the ship had the character of a pit-fighter, or a fighting dog. Its scar-tissue was proud and deliberate.
Like the ritual marks of a bloody-pacted soldier, he reflected.
The plasma engines pulsed again. Hold doors began to seal, and cantilevered armour sections extended back into position. Gaunt’s craft was one of the last to enter the central landing bay before the main space doors shut. The swarm of small ships dispersed, either into the Armaduke to share its voyage, or away to planetside or the nearest orbital fortress. Formations of Fury and Faustus Class attack craft had been circling the ship at a radius of five hundred kilometres to provide protection while she was exposed and vulnerable. Now they formed up to provide escort. Buoy lights blinked. Lines detached. Fleet tenders disengaged and rolled lazily away, like spent suitors or weary concubines. The Armaduke began to move.
Initial acceleration was painfully slow, even at maximum plasma power. It was as though an attempt was being made to slide a building - a basilica, a temple hall - by getting an army of slaves to push it. The ship protested. Its hull plates groaned. Its decks settled and creaked. Its superstructure twitched under the application of vast motive power.
The other ships at high anchor unhooded their lamps to salute the departing ship. Some were true giants of the fleet, grand cruisers and battleships six or seven kilometres long. Their vast shadows fell across the Armaduke as it accelerated along the line of anchorage. To them, it was a battered old relic, an orphan of the fleet they would most likely never see again.
The Fury flight dropped in around the ship in escort formation. The plasma drives grew brighter, their flare reflecting off the noctilucent clouds below, creating a shimmering airglow. Mesospheric ionisation caused bowsprite lightning to dance and flicker along the Armaduke’s crenelated topside until the advancing ship passed into the exosphere and the wash of the magnetosphere’s currents swept the lightshow away.
Stepping out of the launch into the excursion hold as the ship ran out, Gaunt sampled the odour of the vessel’s atmosphere. Every ship had its own flavour. He’d traveled on enough of them to know that. Hundreds or sometimes thousands of years of recirculation and atmospheric processing had allowed things to accumulate in a ship’s lungs. Some smelled oddly sweet, others metallic, others rancid. You always got used to it. A ten or twelve week haul on a shiftship could get you used to anything. The Armaduke smelled of scorched fat, like grease in a kitchen’s chimney.
He would get used to that. You could get used to the smell, the chemical tang of the recycled water, the oddly bland taste of shipboard food. You got used to the constant background grumble of the drives, to the odd noises from a vast superstructure constantly in tension. Once the drives were lit, the hull flexed; once the Gellar Field was up and the ship had translated into the Warp, the hull locked tight, like a well-muscled arm pumped and tensed. You got used to the acceleration sickness, the pervading cold, the odd, slippery displacement where the artificial gravity fields fluctuated and settled.
Once translation had been achieved, you got used to the ports being shuttered. You got used to ignoring whatever was outside. You got used to the baleful screams of the Empyrean, the sounds of hail on the hull, or burning firestorms, or typhoon winds, of fingernails scratching at the port shutters. You got used to the whispers, the shudders and rattles, the inexplicable periods of half-power lighting, the distant subterranean banging, the dreams, the footsteps in empty corridors, the sense that you were plunging further and further into your own subconscious and burning up your sanity to fuel the trip.
The one thing you never got used to was the scale. At high orbit, even with the vast extent of a planet close by for contrast, a starship seemed big. But as the planet dropped away to stern, first the size of an office globe, then a ball, until even the local star was just a fleck of light no bigger than any other star, the embrace of the void became total. The void was endless and eternal, and the few suns no bigger than grains of salt. Alone in the bewildering emptiness, a starship was dwarfed, diminished until it was just a fragile metal casket alone in the monstrous prospect of night.
The Armaduke was accelerating so robustly now, the fighter escort was struggling to match it. Course was locked for the system’s mandeville point, where the warp engines would be started up to make an incision in the the interstitial fabric of space. The Warp awaited them.
The crew and control spaces of a starship tended to be kept separate from the areas used for transported material and passengers, even on a military operation. The transporters and those they were transporting needed very little contact during a voyage.
But the Armaduke was still twenty-six minutes from the translation point when Gaunt presented himself at the shipmaster’s quarters. He did not come alone.
“No entry at this time,” said the midshipman manning the valve hatch. He had six armsmen with him, all with combat shotweapons for shipboard use.
Gaunt showed the midshipman his documentation, documentation that clearly showed he was the commanding officer of the troop units under conveyance.
“That’s all very well,” said the midshipman, displaying that unerring knack of Navy types to avoid using Guard rank formalities, “but the shipmaster is preparing for commitment to translation. He can’t be interrupted. Perhaps in a week or so, he might find some time to–”
“Perhaps he’s done it a thousand times before,” said Gaunt’s companion, stepping out of the bulkhead shadows, “and doesn’t need to do more than authorize the bridge crew to execute. Perhaps he ought to bear in mind that his ship is a vital component of this action and not just a means of transportation. Perhaps you should open this hatch.”
The midshipman went pale.
“Yes, sir,” he said, his voice as small as a shiftship in the open void.
“I hate that,” said Larkin. He froze and refused to continue walking until the ship lights returned to their original brilliance. There was an underdeck tremor. A distant exhalation.
“Worst part of any trip,” he added. The lights came back up, a frosty glare in the low deck companionway. He started walking again.
“The worst?” asked Domor.
“Yeah,” said Larkin. “Apart from getting there.”
“All true,” said Domor.
They had reached the armoured hatchway of a hold space originally designed as a magazine for explosive ordnance. Rawne and Brostin were waiting for them.
“I want a badge like that,” said Larkin.
“Well, you can’t have one,” said Brostin. “It’s only for the kings.”
“The kings can actually kiss my arse,” said Larkin.
Domor looked at Rawne.
“This could continue all day, major,” he said.
“And it still wouldn’t become amusing,” Rawne agreed.
“Gaunt wants us to see him,” said Domor. “Is that all right?”
“Yes,” said Rawne. “Provided you’re who you say you are.”
Larkin winked at Rawne.
“Come on, Eli, these’d be pretty shit disguises, wouldn’t they?”
“What are you suggesting?” asked Domor, a smile forming. “We forced our own faces to change shape?”
“I’ve seen more fethed up things,” said Rawne.
“Nobody here is surprised,” said Larkin.
Rawne nodded to Brostin. The big man banged on the door, and then opened the outer hatch.
“Coming in, two visitors,” said Rawne over his microbead.
“Read that.”
A peephole slot in the inner door opened, and Rawne stood where the viewer could see his face.
The inner hatch opened. Rawne took Domor and Larkin through.
“Got anything he could use as a weapon?” asked Rawne.
“My fething rapier wit?” suggested Larkin.
Mabbon Etogaur was sitting on a folding bunk in one corner of the dank magazine compartment. The walls, deck and ceiling were reinforced ceramite, and the slot hatch for the loader mechanism had been welded shut. The prisoner was reading a trancemissionary pamphlet, one of a stack on his mattress. His right wrist was cuffed to a chain that was bolted to a floor pin.
Varl was sitting on a stool in the opposite corner, his las rifle across his knees. Cant was standing in another corner, nibbling at the quick of his thumbnail.
Larkin and Domor came in and approached the Etogaur.
He looked up.
“I don’t know you,” he said.
“No, but I had you in my crosshairs once,” said Larkin.
“Where?”
“Balhaut.”
“Why didn’t you take the shot?” asked Mabbon.
“And miss a touching moment like this?”
“That’s Domor, that’s Larkin,” said Rawne, pointing.
“Don’t tell him our fething names!” Larkin hissed. “He might do all sorts of fethed-up magic shit with them!”
“I won’t,” said Mabbon.
“He won’t,” Rawne agreed.
“He can’t,” said Varl.
“Why not?” asked Larkin.
“Because how else would I be the punchline for another of Varl’s jokes?” asked Cant wearily.
Larkin snorted.
“He won’t because he’s cooperating,” said Rawne, ignoring the others.
“And if I did,” said Mabbon, “Rawne would gut me.”
“He does do that,” Larkin nodded.
“What did you need from me?” asked Mabbon.
“A consult,” said Domor. He had a sheaf of rolled papers under his arm, and a dataslate in his hand.
“Go on,” said Mabbon.
Larkin took the pamphlet out of Mabbon’s hand and glanced at it.
“Good read?” he asked.
“I enjoy the subject matter,” said Mabbon.
“A doctrine of conversion to the Imperial Creed?” asked Larkin.
“Fantasy,” replied Mabbon.
“He’d be a fething funny man if he didn’t scare the shit out of me,” Larkin said to Rawne.
“We’re leading the insertion effort,” said Domor. “There’s training to be done, planning. We want to use transit time to get as ready as possible.”
“Are you combat engineering?” asked Mabbon.
“Yes,” said Domor. “Larks... Larkin, he’s marksman squad.”
“I saw the lanyard.”
“We want to go over the deck plans and schematics you’ve supplied so far. It may mean several hours work over a period of days.”
“I’ll try to build time into my schedule.”
“Some of the plans are vague,” said Larkin.
“So are some of my memories. It’s all from memory.”
“If you go through them a few times,” said Rawne, “maybe you can firm things up.”
The Etogaur nodded.
“If you go through them so many times you’re sick of them, maybe we’ll actually do this right,” Rawne added.
“I’ve no problem with that,” said Mabbon. “I offered this to you. I want it to happen.”
Domor showed him the dataslate.
“We want to talk about this too,” he said. “This firing mechanism. We need to mock some up for practice purposes. You say this is fairly standard?”
“It’s representative of the sort of firing mechanisms and trigger systems you’re going to find,” said Mabbon, studying the slate image.
“It’s just mechanical,” said Larkin.
“It has to be. They can’t risk anything more... more complicated. They can’t risk using anything that might interfere with, or be interfered with by, the devices under development at the target location. It’s delicate. Any conflict in arcane processes or conjurations could be disastrous.”
“So just mechanical?” said Larkin.
“Complex and very delicate. Very sensitive. But, yes. Just mechanical.”
Larkin took the slate back.
“It looks very... It looks very much like the sort of thing we use,” he said. “It looks pretty standard.”
“It’s the sort of trigger mech I would rig,” Domor said.
“Of course,” said Mabbon. “Tried and tested Guard practice. This is the sort of thing I taught them how to do. And I learned it the same place you did.”
Larkin looked at Domor. There was distaste on his face.
“Go get the folding table,” Rawne said to Varl. “Let’s look over these plans.”
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Dan Abnett a posté sur sa page facebook l'extrait déjà cité plus haut dans ce topic...
Par ICI Salvation's Reach - an exclusive extract!
:abnett:
Par ICI Salvation's Reach - an exclusive extract!
:abnett:
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Encore un trés beau livre, il sortira sûrement l'année prochaine en français car la série des Gaunt a un super succés auprés des lecteurs.
Dernière édition par Corax le Jeu 22 Sep 2011 - 8:10, édité 1 fois
Codex Raven Guard
Corax Maître de Guerre - Messages : 6772
Age : 46
Localisation : Délivrance / Lorraine
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Un article sur le roman Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett sur le blog The Founding Fields (en anglais) :
Salvation's Reach by Dan Abnett (Advanced Review)
:abnett:
Salvation's Reach by Dan Abnett (Advanced Review)
:abnett:
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Le roman Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett est en pré-commande depuis hier sur le site de la Black Library.
La BL en profite pour faire un promo très dynamique !
Via sa newsletter d'abord :
Ensuite sur son site web officiel :
Prix indicatif : 25 € - sortie en octobre 2011.
Source Salvation is here
:abnett:
La BL en profite pour faire un promo très dynamique !
Via sa newsletter d'abord :
Ensuite sur son site web officiel :
Salvation’s Reach, the 13th novel in the Gaunt’s Ghosts series is now available to preorder.
Here is a BLTV trailer to stir the patriotic fervour of any loyal Tanith and get you fired up for the next instalment in Black Library’s best loved and longest running Warhammer 40,000 series. [...]
Salvation’s Reach is a glorious hardback novel (as befits a book of this stature). The new paperback version of the Sabbat Worlds Anthology is also up for advance order, featuring authors Graham McNeill, Aaron Dembski-Bowden and, of course, Dan Abnett, it explores the myriad battlefields of the Sabbat Worlds.
Prix indicatif : 25 € - sortie en octobre 2011.
Source Salvation is here
:abnett:
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Sympa comme tout la promo sur ce futur bon bouquin sur les Fantômes.
Codex Raven Guard
Corax Maître de Guerre - Messages : 6772
Age : 46
Localisation : Délivrance / Lorraine
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
J'adore la série des Fantômes, je me le prendrais, c'est sur !!!
“Je suis l'Archi-ennemi, le Destructeur de Mondes. C'est par ma main que le faux Empereur sera déchu."
- Compendium XVI Légion Heresy Era -
Abaddon Primarque - Messages : 4418
Age : 60
Localisation : Oeil de la Terreur
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Un article (en anglais) sur le blog The Founding Fields à propos de ce roman !
Par ICI Salvation's Reach by Dan Abnett - Advanced Review
:abnett:
Par ICI Salvation's Reach by Dan Abnett - Advanced Review
:abnett:
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Depuis hier le roman Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett est disponible dans une version Unabridged audiobook MP3 Download...
==> SALVATION'S REACH de Dan Abnett
The Tanith First-And-Only embark on a desperate mission that could decide the fate of the Sabbat Worlds Crusade in the thirteenth book of this popular Imperial Guard series.
The Ghosts of the Tanith First-and-Only have been away from the front line for too long. Listless, and hungry for action, they are offered a mission that perfectly suits their talents. The objective: the mysterious Salvation’s Reach, a remote and impenetrable stronghold concealing secrets that could change the course of the Sabbat Worlds campaign. But the proposed raid is so hazardous, it’s regarded as a suicide mission, and the Ghosts may have been in reserve for so long they’ve lost their edge. Haunted by spectres from the past and stalked by the Archenemy, Colonel-Commissar Gaunt and his Ghosts embark upon what could be their finest hour… or their final mission.
October 2011 • Unabridged audio, over 12 hours in length, MP3 download• ISBN 9780857873231
Par ICI Salvation's Reach (Unabridged audiobook)
A noter que l'édition imprimée sur papier sortira en octobre prochain.
==> SALVATION'S REACH de Dan Abnett
The Tanith First-And-Only embark on a desperate mission that could decide the fate of the Sabbat Worlds Crusade in the thirteenth book of this popular Imperial Guard series.
The Ghosts of the Tanith First-and-Only have been away from the front line for too long. Listless, and hungry for action, they are offered a mission that perfectly suits their talents. The objective: the mysterious Salvation’s Reach, a remote and impenetrable stronghold concealing secrets that could change the course of the Sabbat Worlds campaign. But the proposed raid is so hazardous, it’s regarded as a suicide mission, and the Ghosts may have been in reserve for so long they’ve lost their edge. Haunted by spectres from the past and stalked by the Archenemy, Colonel-Commissar Gaunt and his Ghosts embark upon what could be their finest hour… or their final mission.
October 2011 • Unabridged audio, over 12 hours in length, MP3 download• ISBN 9780857873231
Par ICI Salvation's Reach (Unabridged audiobook)
A noter que l'édition imprimée sur papier sortira en octobre prochain.
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
La Black Library propose depuis hier d'écouter au format audiobook le premier chapitre du roman Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett.
En anglais bien sûr.
Cela se passe par ICI Salvation's Reach (Unabridged audiobook)
En anglais bien sûr.
Cela se passe par ICI Salvation's Reach (Unabridged audiobook)
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Les personnages vont parler tellement vite que je ne vais pas comprendre ce qu'ils disent alors autant attendre que le livre sorte en Français.
Codex Raven Guard
Corax Maître de Guerre - Messages : 6772
Age : 46
Localisation : Délivrance / Lorraine
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Un article critique (en anglais) a été posté hier sur le blog Graeme's Fantasy Book Review à propos du roman Salvation's Reach :
Par ICI ‘Salvation’s Reach’ – Dan Abnett
Par ICI ‘Salvation’s Reach’ – Dan Abnett
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Un nouvel article critique (en anglais) sur Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett, posté sur le blog I Well Read Books :
Par ICI Salvation's Reach - Dan Abnett
Par ICI Salvation's Reach - Dan Abnett
Administration Admin - Messages : 6893
Corax Maître de Guerre - Messages : 6772
Age : 46
Localisation : Délivrance / Lorraine
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Plutôt bonne...
Give a monkey a brain... And He'll swear that he's the center of the Universe
Roboutte Guilliman Maître de Guerre - Messages : 4523
Age : 58
Localisation : Suisse, Montpellier, Savoie.. Le multiverse quoi
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Petit up sur cette présentation qui est la suite du pacte de sang . Pas de news pour le moment sur la version VF
Haut Connétable Uther - Pour les Black Librarians ! Pour le Forum !
Ce sont les vainqueurs qui écrivent l'histoire
uther33 Maître de Guerre - Messages : 5674
Age : 54
Localisation : Guyenne
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
En tout cas, pour l'avoir lu, Salvation's Reach relance complètement la série.
Abnett trouve encore le moyen de nous étonner après autant d’épisodes. Autant j’avais trouvé Le Pacte de Sang un peu moyen (ou trop long), autant là, on a son lot de surprises, de nouveautés et une véritable nouvelle dynamique qui se met en place.
De nouveaux personnages (et pas des moindres), de nouvelles intrigues, des vétérans toujours plus badass, un Gaunt qui va devoir géré l’arrivée de plusieurs éléments plutôt inattendus (don un !) et une bataille au final qui ne sera pas le terrain favori des fantômes. Des larmes aussi, on perd un des fantômes…
On part avec un pitch de départ assez conventionnel : Le général qui envoie les fantômes vers la mission suicide qui peut faire basculer la campagne – On se dit : encore ?
Et puis non, en fait…car là c’est que de l’inédit – et ça relance carrément la série. Celui-là est à ne pas manquer !
Abnett trouve encore le moyen de nous étonner après autant d’épisodes. Autant j’avais trouvé Le Pacte de Sang un peu moyen (ou trop long), autant là, on a son lot de surprises, de nouveautés et une véritable nouvelle dynamique qui se met en place.
De nouveaux personnages (et pas des moindres), de nouvelles intrigues, des vétérans toujours plus badass, un Gaunt qui va devoir géré l’arrivée de plusieurs éléments plutôt inattendus (don un !) et une bataille au final qui ne sera pas le terrain favori des fantômes. Des larmes aussi, on perd un des fantômes…
On part avec un pitch de départ assez conventionnel : Le général qui envoie les fantômes vers la mission suicide qui peut faire basculer la campagne – On se dit : encore ?
Et puis non, en fait…car là c’est que de l’inédit – et ça relance carrément la série. Celui-là est à ne pas manquer !
Vil xenos omniscient
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Disposons-nous déjà d'une date pour la vf? (désolé j'ai du loupé l'info)
BlooDrunk Modérateur - Messages : 9076
Age : 42
Localisation : Sarum 57
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
BlooDrunk a écrit:Disposons-nous déjà d'une date pour la vf? (désolé j'ai du loupé l'info)
Pas pour le moment
Haut Connétable Uther - Pour les Black Librarians ! Pour le Forum !
Ce sont les vainqueurs qui écrivent l'histoire
uther33 Maître de Guerre - Messages : 5674
Age : 54
Localisation : Guyenne
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Olala!! Vivement l'arrivée VF. Je suis vraiment un fan comme vous.
ça fait même un bail que l'on attend maintenant.
Effectivement l'avantage d'une série créée et tenue par un seul et même auteur, ça change tout à la cohérence et donc à la qualité de cette saga.
Tanith Forever ^^
ça fait même un bail que l'on attend maintenant.
Effectivement l'avantage d'une série créée et tenue par un seul et même auteur, ça change tout à la cohérence et donc à la qualité de cette saga.
Tanith Forever ^^
“La connaissance est en elle-même puissance.”
MysterJZ Space Marine - Messages : 225
Age : 44
Localisation : Genève ou sur Prospero...
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Question :
Honte a moi je n'est jamais lu les Gaunts , alors voila :
Est ce que la série est bien ?
Contre qui se battent t'ils ?
Les méchants sont t'ils travailler ?
Et plus important , les fantômes sont t'ils attachant ?
Merci et sorry pour les fautes .
Honte a moi je n'est jamais lu les Gaunts , alors voila :
Est ce que la série est bien ?
Contre qui se battent t'ils ?
Les méchants sont t'ils travailler ?
Et plus important , les fantômes sont t'ils attachant ?
Merci et sorry pour les fautes .
La mort hante les ténèbres, et elle connaît votre nom ! Je suis Night Haunter.
Non, ne t'envole pas, petit corbeau. Reste. Nous n'en avons pas terminé, toi et moi.( Konrad à Corax)
Vous êtes tellement plus que simplement abjects. (Konrad à Lorgar)
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Konrad Curze a écrit:Question :
Honte a moi je n'est jamais lu les Gaunts , alors voila :
Est ce que la série est bien ?
Contre qui se battent t'ils ?
Les méchants sont t'ils travailler ?
Et plus important , les fantômes sont t'ils attachant ?
Merci et sorry pour les fautes .
Cette série est juste la meilleure du catalogue de la BL.
Les Fantômes se battent contre les forces du chaos... c'est à dire des renégats, quelques rares space marines du Chaos et surtout le Pacte de Sang.
Les méchants sont cool.
Les fantômes sont très très très attachants. C'est la meilleure description et utilisation de personnages secondaire que je connaisse chez la BL. Et quand y'en a un qui meurt... ça fait rudement de la peine.
Et puis bon, c'est la Garde Impériale + un Commissaire en personnage principal = la meilleure chose qui soit (les Space Marines c'est pour les faibles).
ACHÈTE !
Nico. Admin - Messages : 10494
Age : 34
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Il est dispo depuis hier^^MysterJZ a écrit:Olala!! Vivement l'arrivée VF.
+1MysterJZ a écrit:
Tanith Forever
BlooDrunk Modérateur - Messages : 9076
Age : 42
Localisation : Sarum 57
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
Comme la dit Nico oui la série les Fantômes de Gaunt est la meilleur.
Les personnages sont attachants, charismatique et bien mis en avant.
La série est très, très bien écrite et tu rentres vite fait dans l'histoire.
Ils se battent principalement contre des hérétiques et oui les méchants sont plutôt bien fait.
La série se divise en quatre parties dont les trois premières sont faites et la dernière est en cours.
L'histoire se passe pendant la croisade des mondes de Sabbat, je crois en plus que c'est Abnett qui l'a inventé.
Et de plus les livres de Dan Abnett sont tous réputé pour être les meilleurs.(vive Eisehnorn et Ravenor^^)
Les personnages sont attachants, charismatique et bien mis en avant.
La série est très, très bien écrite et tu rentres vite fait dans l'histoire.
Ils se battent principalement contre des hérétiques et oui les méchants sont plutôt bien fait.
La série se divise en quatre parties dont les trois premières sont faites et la dernière est en cours.
L'histoire se passe pendant la croisade des mondes de Sabbat, je crois en plus que c'est Abnett qui l'a inventé.
Et de plus les livres de Dan Abnett sont tous réputé pour être les meilleurs.(vive Eisehnorn et Ravenor^^)
Bien d'accord(les Space Marines c'est pour les faibles).
Rhydysann Premier Capitaine - Messages : 1998
Age : 25
Localisation : Paris
Re: Salvation's Reach de Dan Abnett
BlooDrunk a écrit:Il est dispo depuis hier^^MysterJZ a écrit:Olala!! Vivement l'arrivée VF.+1MysterJZ a écrit:
Tanith Forever
Merci (surtout de la part d'un W.E. lol ^^) c'est un point réput ou pour le fun? (chui pas très au parfum dsl...)
“La connaissance est en elle-même puissance.”
MysterJZ Space Marine - Messages : 225
Age : 44
Localisation : Genève ou sur Prospero...
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