Ratings4
Average rating3.1
The Emperor's most trusted guardians fight beside his elite witch-hunters to defend the Golden Throne. The Custodian Guard have stood watch over the Emperor's Palace on Terra since the foundation of the Imperium. Charged with protecting the Master of Mankind from all threats, within and without, their fearsome resolve is renowned throughout the galaxy, and their golden armour is the last thing that a would-be assassin or saboteur will ever see. Alongside the Null-maidens of the Sisters of Silence, who are anathema to psykers and sorcerers alike, there is no threat to the Golden Throne that they alone cannot vanquish... until now.
Series
647 released booksWarhammer 40,000 is a 647-book series first released in 1949 with contributions by George Orwell, Timothy West, and Ian Watson.
Series
2 primary booksWatchers of the Throne is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2017 with contributions by Chris Wraight.
Reviews with the most likes.
Builds up to an unbelievable climax on the throneworld that... you don't get to see because you're supposed to buy a sourcebook too.
Tierion shits his pants and gets annoyed at the Council while Aleya and Valerion GET SHIT DONE.
This book has some really great ideas: focusing on the events around the destruction of Cadia but from the perspective of people living on Terra; the machinations of the high lords, the introduction of the Custodies to the wider theatres of war and the reformation of the sisters of silence into a cohesive force. Unfortunately, for me, it was ultimately a disappointment.
With the exception of the Sister of Silence character - who was completely badass - the point of view characters fell flat for me. We get told about their challenges and personality traits, but I never really felt any of it. With a lot of narrative ground to cover across three separate points of view in less than 300 pages, there just didn't feel like the time for the characters or the setting to really come alive. The result was the characters were thin and the personal stakes for each one never felt especially meaningful to me.
I would recommend Wraight's Vaults of Terra series over this one any day. Those books deal with the same themes and time period as this one but, for my money, the characters are far more compelling and the plot much more exciting and satisfying.