
Gaunt's ghost series,, by Dan Abnett (with the exception of The Sabbat Worlds, which is a short stories collection).Deals with the Eldar and the Black library, as well as chaos marines of the Thousand Suns legion and several daemon worlds. Follows the party of renegade Inquisitors Czevak and Klute.
Similarly focusses on him and the people he works with, with some aliens, but mostly chaos antagonists.
Follows the career of Eisenhorn's former apprentice. Better, but not necessary to read before the Ravenor trilogy. Focuses on him and the characters he interacts with, includes a few aliens, but mostly chaos antagonists. Follows the career of the Inquisitor Eisenhorn. There are other books available, but I'm not going to detail anything I can't guarantee will be in the series: Here is a selection of books, categorised by protagonist, with a brief overview of what each will tell you and who the antagonists are. For a fairly detailed overview of the history of the Imperium, the civil war and why things are as ruined for humanity as they are, I'd recommend The Horus Heresy, Collected Visions, which is not a novel. There is no correct reading order outside of any particular series, it is dependent on what you want to read about within the universe.įor the series with the greatest number of races involved in it, I would recommend the Ciaphus Cain series of novels. Read warhammer books online free plus#
Different books focus on the different races, with the most prevalent being Space Marines and Imperial Guard, plus whoever they happen to be fighting against. There are a large number of novels in the Black Library for you to choose from, broken down into either stand alone books, parts of long running series or trilogies. (Named after the Eldar repository of knowledge in the lore itself, in case you wonder why some books talk about it directly).
Games Workshop maintains a publishing arm called the Black Library.