
Captain Kor'sarro Khan of the White Scars is petitioned by his Chapter Master to hunt down and destroy the daemon prince Voldorius of the Alpha Legion.
September 2010
After a series of failures, Grey Seer Thanquol is offered a chance to redeem himself by going to the island of Lustria to kill the Prophet of Sotek.
September 2010
Dangerous races seek to destroy humanity wherever they turn –the brutish orks, the ravening hordes of the tyranid, the unrelenting necrons and the mysterious eldar.
Edited by Christian Dunn
September 2010
Held prisoner by the Imperial Fists and on the brink of being condemned by their fellow Astartes, the once proud Soul Drinkers are a pale shadow of what they once were.
August 2010
After the horrors of Istvaan V, Horus declares outright war against the Imperium. In the shadows of the Emperor's Palace, powerful figures convene.
August 2010
When orcs and goblins invade the Empire, the Emperor Dieter IV does nothing. While the other elector counts bicker, Prince Wilhelm is left to defend the Reikland alone.
August 2010
The Night Lords are among the most feared Chaos Space Marines in the universe. They prey on their victims from the shadows, stalking the faithful of the False Imperium.
August 2010

The ancient eldar are a mysterious race, each devoting their life to a chosen path which will guide their actions and decide their fate.
July 2010
Once rich and famous, a string of bad luck has brought Janus Darke to the brink of ruin. Dreaming of past glories the last thing he wants is to accept a commission from two mysterious strangers
July 2010
Fresh from the slaughter of enemies in the north, Ludwig Schwarzhelm, Emperor's Champion, is sent to Averland to oversee the inauguration of a new elector count.
July 2010
Enforcer Shira Calpurnia maintains a tough line on law and order in the Hydraphur system and her duty is to protect the innocent and punish the guilty.
July 2010
We have been made aware that some Mastercard users are currently unable to check out, we are working on a fix for this as quickly as possible. If you have another card we recommend that you use it in the meantime. Our apologies for the inconvenience in the meantime.
There's just one problem with Jon Sullivan's artwork - it really breaks your heart when you have to shrink it down to novel cover size. He puts such a wealth of detail into everything he does, that we may have to start releasing our books in a new shed-sized format, just to show off the artwork properly. The images below are all taken from one piece - the cover of next year's Fall of Damnos book.
The boy done good.

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Posted by The Black Library Team
Thursday 29th of July, 2010 : 2 Comments
http://bit.ly/azgWpc - If you've not seen it yet, here's a little more of what we'll feature at UK Games Day.... http://fb.me/un9zed9D
01:12 PM Jul 30th, 2010
Earlier this year, once it had been cleared by the Inquisition, we took time out to ask a few questions to the legend that is Ian Watson, to celebrate the Print-on-Demand re-issue of Space Marine.
Looking back now, would you say you were still happy with Space Marine or, knowing what you know now, would you change anything about it?
Personally I’d change nothing about the book itself, since changing it would lose freshness and spontaneity. I do myself regard Space Marine as part of the Inquisition War series – and indeed it is thus in the gigantic Hungarian language omnibus edition – since my Space Marine, Lexandro d’Arquebus, plays a role in Harlequin and then a major role in Chaos Child.
Read the rest of the interview.
Posted by The Black Library Team
Friday 16th of July, 2010 : 1 Comment
Once in awhile you get something you really wanted. For me, that came with a brief query from my editor asking if I would like to do a series of novels focused on Grey Seer Thanquol. If I tell you it took me all of five seconds to answer that one, I’d be overestimating things.
The skaven have always held a special place for me. They were what first made me really notice Warhammer. All these weird little ratmen with guns and flamethrowers and gas masks were something that piqued my curiosity. Certainly none of the other fantasy settings flooding the market in the late 1980’s had such things. Then I saw an advertisement for Warhammer RPG in a gaming magazine that featured a lengthy text piece written from the point of view of an imprisoned witch hunter. By the end of the piece, the terrified man is turned over to the skaven by his corrupt gaoler. Even these many years later, that evocative bit of writing still sticks in my mind.
Of all the heroes in the Warhammer setting, I’m almost invariably drawn to the bad guys. Nagash, Azhag the Slaughterer, Mannfred von Carstein, Wulfrik the Wanderer, but above them all in my esteem towers Grey Seer Thanquol. Reading William King’s Gotrek and Felix stories, I found the scheming, craven Thanquol to be the star of the show. He was just so damn exciting and you never knew what he was going to do next or how he would try to twist something around to his benefit. There was something positively cathartic to read about a character with absolutely no redeeming values. A villain after my own heart (which, I’m sure, Thanquol would make a nice snack out of).
When I had the chance to write my own Thanquol stories, one thing I took extreme pains to do was keep Thanquol himself true to the way he was written in Herr King’s books. The second thing I decided was to make everything else as different from Gotrek and Felix in style and tone as I could. For the first novel, I pitted Thanquol against a mysterious wizard, the story unfolding in the shadows of Altdorf. In the second novel, Thanquol finds himself in the green hell of Lustria opposing a powerful skink sorcerer. In both instances, I tried to find challenges that would put Thanquol in very different situations from what he encountered against Gotrek and Felix. It was always a delight trying to figure out exactly how Thanquol would flatter, bully or trick his way out of trouble (with the occasional warpstone-fuelled magical assault when the opportunity presented itself, naturally). There’s something about an inveterate coward who doesn’t even understand why he shouldn’t use one of his underlings as a living shield, much less think twice about doing so.
Now, in Temple of the Serpent, we find Thanquol in very dire straits. Conscripted into a nefarious plot by Clan Eshin to help them assassinate the powerful Xiuhcoatl, Prophet of Sotek, Thanquol finds himself completely out of his element. The sweltering jungles of Lustria are just teeming with all sorts of things that want to kill him: dinosaurs, carnivorous plants, cannibal fish, piranha-lizards, venomous frogs, zombies and, of course, the lizardmen themselves. But his trouble doesn’t end there. You see, there’s an old enemy lurking among the skaven expedition and he’s not missing any opportunity to try to settle the score!
Posted by The Black Library Team
Tuesday 6th of July, 2010 : 1 Comment
