Various authors, Age of Darkness. Nottingham, England: Black Library, 2011. ISBN: 9780857871534.
This short fiction anthology is number 16 in the Horus Heresy series. This volume features nine stories:
- "Rules of Engagement" by Graham McNeill.
- "Liar's Due" by James Swallow.
- "Forgotten Sons" by Nick Kyme.
- "The Last Remembrancer" by John French.
- "Rebirth" by Chris Wraight.
- "The Face of Treachery" by Gav Thorpe.
- "Little Horus" by Dan Abnett.
- "The Iron Within" by Rob Sanders.
- "Savage Weapons" Aaron Dembski-Bowden.
As often happens with anthologies some stories are better than others. The stories look at various situations and events of the Horus Heresy, often things happening behind the scenes or in more out of the way places. The book as a whole is a pretty good read. Pacing may vary; one or two stories may be a bit slow.
Let me highlight the stories I found interesting and/or memorable:
- "Rules of Engagement" looks at Roboute Guilliman as he is writing the Codex Astartes. This provides a frame to a story of space marines involved in various engagements.
- "Liar's Due" is about a spy infiltrating a backwater world and sowing chaos and conflict. As he says, he is the whole invasion because the Warmaster has more important things to do. Once the twist is revealed, the story gets interesting.
- In Abnett's story, Little Horus Aximand is bothered by dreams he probably should not be having. The story also looks a bit at how Little Horus relates to the Warmaster.
- I always like a story of the Iron Warriors, and "The Iron Within" fit the bill well.
Overall, this is an average collection. It's not great, but it is not bad either. Can you skip it? Yes, probably. Completists will want to read it. I'd recommend it for readers who enjoy short fiction and stories that focus more on behind the scenes rather than epic battles.
I liked it.
3 out of 5 stars.
Additional reading notes:
"Liar's Due" offered a couple of quotes that resonate for our Hard Times such as this one:
"It's the people who are killers. People down there, in Town Forty-Four and every other place just like it. People like your father, and Prael and all the rest. They let themselves be manipulated, because deep within them, they want to be right. They want to have their darkest fears come true, to validate their loathing of the lives they lead" -- Mendacs, in "Liar's Due" (74).
From "The Face of Treachery"
"In times such as these, even the most trusted face can conceal an enemy" (181).
From "The Iron Within"
"From iron cometh strength. From strength cometh will. From will cometh faith. From faith cometh honour. From honour comes iron. This is the Unbreakable Litany. And may it forever be so" (238).
Book qualifies for the following 2026 Reading Challenge:









