Showing posts with label Ciaphas Cain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ciaphas Cain. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

“The Smallest Detail” by Sandy Mitchell (Black Library)

Mitchell-SmallestDetailThe busy, dangerous life of a Commissar’s aide…

The ‘simple’ task Jurgen is sent on by Ciaphas Cain proves to be nothing of the kind… Just how much with the aide tell his master about what really happened?

It’s been a fair while since I last read anything in Mitchell’s Ciaphas Cain series. I also have to admit that I wasn’t hugely impressed by the previous one that I did read. As a result, I may have missed one or two. Nevertheless, I do enjoy the characters, and thought this short story sounded quite fun, centering as it does on Jurgen, Cain’s much-put-upon and odorous personal aide.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Summer Giveaway #1 & 2: Black Library

So. I’m heading back across the Pond for the rest of 2012 (at least), and that means I’m going through another Replace-With-eBook Clear-Out. And, just like last year, this means I’m going to be running a few giveaways. I would much rather give these books to readers than just dump them on a charity shop or library. I’ll try to keep the giveaways thematic, too: there will be two Black Library ones, one alternate-London selection, and maybe specific fantasy and Sci-Fi giveaways as well. I’ll list 2-3 per week.

To enter, please either email your details to the Civilian Reader address (at the bottom of the page), or leave your name in the comments along with some way of getting in touch with you if possible (Twitter handle or anti-spam-version of an email address, for example). Please state which giveaway you’re interested in, too, although you can say both.

Unfortunately, these will be limited to UK and EU. Sorry about this, it’s just too expensive to ship stuff further afield. I’ll try to run more for North America from September.

To kick things off, here are the two Black Library giveaways:

Ciaphas Cain

Summer2012-Giveaway-BL2

Everyone’s favourite Imperial Guard anti-hero, this giveaway is for the latest two volumes in the series by Sandy Mitchell: The Emperor’s Finest (paperback) and The Last Ditch (hardcover).

Warhammer & Warhammer 40,000

Summer2012-Giveaway-BL1

A more general selection of recent Black Library releases, all of which I’ve either read and reviewed already, or replaced with eBook editions to read later: Path of the Renegade by Andy Chambers, Phalanx by Ben Counter, The Gotrek & Felix Anthology edited by Christian Dunn, and Luthor Huss by Chris Wraight.

I’ll leave this running until midnight (GMT) on Friday 24th August.

Monday, May 14, 2012

“Dead in the Water” by Sandy Mitchell (Black Library)

Mitchell-DeadInTheWater

Performed by Toby Longworth

Commissar Ciaphas Cain is a renowned and revered hero of the Imperium, a man who has faced and survived some of the vilest creatures the universe can throw at him. But when he is sent to a river-world, he must deal with a dangerous enemy, an enemy whose true identity remains unknown. As his vessel traverses the straits of the planet, Cain must uncover the face of this new foe so that he can understand and escape it. Caught in the enemy crossfire, the commissar has no place to run, and his nerve will be tested to the very limits.

I’ve been a fan of Sandy Mitchell’s Ciaphas Cain series ever since the first book, For The Emperor, so I wanted to put together just a quick review of this audio-drama. I was interested to see how the character transferred over into this medium, and I have to say I think it worked quite well. The series and character add a refreshing cynical tone to the WH40k setting, and I quite enjoyed this. Not to be missed if you’re a fan of the novels.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

“The Emperor’s Finest”, by Sandy Mitchell (Black Library)

Mitchell-EmperorsFinest

Ciaphas Cain comes face-to-face with the Great Devourer, once again plunging unwittingly into Heroism…

Commissar Cain is called to duty once more, saving a governor’s daughter from a planet over-run by rebels. The uprising hides something far more sinister however…

The search for the source of the alien threat leads Cain to a drifting space hulk – a far safer place than beside the obsessed governor’s daughter.

But when the Reclaimer Space Marines suffer devastating losses at the hands of the Great Devourer, Cain and his trusty aide Jurgen must go it alone. With the tyranids waking and a group of stow away orks on the loose, there are no safe places to run or hide, and Cain must use all his ingenuity and cunning to escape the space hulk alive.

It’s been a while since I read a Ciaphas Cain novel (I think the last one was The Traitor’s Hand), but reading The Emperor’s Finest I was quickly reminded of how much I enjoyed this slightly unorthodox Warhammer 40,000 series.

The novel’s plot takes a little while to really get going, but we are immediately re-introduced to Cain and his particular way of looking at things (i.e. self-involved). Once Cain and the Reclaimers Space Marines he is accompanying arrive on Viridia – an agri-world currently in the throes of a widespread, violent uprising – they are quickly thrown into action as Cain inadvertently volunteers for a search-and-destroy mission. In the process of executing this mission, he is introduced to Mira, the governor’s daughter, who irritates Cain from the very first moment he sees her (their relationship develops as the novel progresses, not always for the better). His first mission also reveals the depths of the conspiracy tearing Viridia apart, plunging Cain into an even deadlier mission with the Reclaimers, as they hunt a Space Hulk.

From the tunnels below and war-ravaged streets of Viridia, to the corridors of the Space Marine vessel and the Space Hulk, the various atmospheres (of menace, tension, and also pious calm) are well-realised on the page, and because the action is never far away it is very difficult to get impatient with the story. Mitchell is very adept at writing battle scenes and skirmishes, and Cain’s perspective offers something new and different from the usual perspective of devout and heroic warriors that make up many of the Black Library’s WH40k novels. Cain’s thoughts on those around him are often amusing and usually critical or sarcastic – something he could not get away with out loud, and something not often evinced by other protagonists in WH40k novels, who tend less towards the sarcastic and self-involved or outright selfish.

As Cain travels through Viridia in the aftermath of the initial Reclaimers assault, we get an impression of the city and those posted to defend it – not to mention the psychological impact (i.e. heightened paranoia and suspicion) a genestealer uprising can instil in loyalists. We also get a look at Cain’s approach to his job – which is quite different from the commissars portrayed in the gaming literature (basically trigger-happy zealots as likely to put a bullet in a friendly for insubordination or some other minor infraction as they are to shoot the enemy). Like Black Library’s other famous commissar, Ibram Gaunt, Cain is from the more measured school: he believes in the importance and efficacy of kind words and encouragement, in addition to stern orders and rule of law. His heroic, “fraudulent” (his words) reputation helps make his magnanimity appear sincere and noble, rather than the necessary self-preservation tactic he views it to be (many commissars have... fallen in battle, early in their careers…).

Unusually, in my opinion, Mitchell’s battle/action scenes are better than the calmer inter-battle scenes, which I normally prefer in other novels (particularly those by Dan Abnett and Aaron Dembski-Bowden). Mitchell does still pay attention to character development, of course, and the whole cast is well-drawn; but his real strength lies in the quick-paced action sequences, with Mitchell’s prose pulling you along perfectly. For those new to the series, the ‘edited-memoir’ form the novels take is rather handy – Inquisitor Amberley Vail’s footnotes offer background details, amusing asides and critiques of Cain’s statements, as well as chronological context, without ruining the flow of the novel. The inclusion of Vail’s footnotes allows for an extra narrative take on Cain’s memoirs – we get complaints about Cain’s “cavalier approach to chronology”, Vail’s clear dislike (or, at minimum, disrespect) of Mira, and also commentary on Cain’s more cowardly or self-preservational comments.

The author has said that Cain is based loosely on the characters of George MacDonald Fraser’s Harry Flashman and Edmund Blackadder, and you can certainly see the same self-interested, hide-saving tendencies of these two anti-heroes in Ciaphas Cain. However, Cain is actually rather adept and skilled in the arts of warfare (otherwise he would have been dead long ago), in addition to his prodigious luck, which makes these novels action-packed as well as amusing diversions. That Mitchell has managed to maintain the momentum over seven novels and five short stories is laudatory, and bodes well for the future adventures of Commissar Cain.

While this is not the best series published by Black Library, it offers a fast-paced and entertaining read for fans of the Warhammer 40,000 universe. The Emperor’s Finest is also one of the better novels in the series – far more streamlined and expertly crafted than some of his other novels (particularly the Inquisition novels he’s written, which dragged just a little more than I would have liked). With the Ciaphas Cain series, Mitchell does not delve too deeply into the psyches and motives of his characters, and is far more intent on providing a fun, fast-paced, and plot-driven story to entertain his audience. He succeeds.

If you’re looking for a novel set in the Warhammer 40,000 universe that is a little more tongue-in-cheek, a little more subversive, and slightly unconventional, then any of the Ciaphas Cain novels should appeal. The Emperor’s Finest continues the series in fine form, and was both entertaining and well-written.

*     *     *

The Ciaphas Cain Series:

If you’re new to the series, you’re in luck – Black Library has collected the first six Ciaphas Cain novels into two, excellently-priced omnibus editions.

Mitchell-CiaphasCainOmnibuses

- Hero of the Imperium (includes: For the Emperor, Caves of Ice, The Traitor’s Hand + three short stories: The Beguiling, Fight or Flight & Echoes of the Tomb)

- Defender of the Imperium (Death or Glory, Duty Calls, Cain’s Last Stand + two short stories: Traitor’s Gambit & Sector Thirteen)