Space Hulk by Gav Thorpe.
The Space Hulk Sin of Damnation is infamous among the Blood Angels, the site of one of the chapter’s most traumatic failures. This drifting labyrinth of fused starship wreckage has haunted them for centuries, not just because of the Genestealer infestation lurking inside, but because it was here that the Blood Angels once committed their entire chapter to a cleansing operation… and paid for it in blood. They underestimated the scale of the xenos threat, and by the time the survivors clawed their way back out, only fifty Marines remained, Dante among them. The loss was so devastating that it became a defining wound in the chapter’s history, feeding their already‑heavy burden of guilt tied to the Black Rage and the legacy of Sanguinius. For six hundred years, the memory of that disaster festered, a stain on their honour and a reminder that even the sons of the Angel can falter. Now the Blood Angels have returned for a second attempt, armed with hard‑won experience and a determination to face the nightmare that once broke them. This book follows that renewed assault and explores whether the chapter can finally put their ghosts to rest, reclaim their pride, and prove that the sins of the past don’t have to define their future.
An older story, but still a really entertaining quick read. The atmosphere is tight, confusing, and claustrophobic in all the right ways, and the author nails that sense of being trapped in a maze where danger is always one corner away. The combat feels frantic and high‑stakes, the kind of fighting where even veteran Terminators, armed to the teeth and trained for the worst, are only a heartbeat away from being overwhelmed. The shadow of the previous failed assault hangs over everything, and the book weaves that history into the second mission beautifully, adding an extra layer of pressure to every decision the Blood Angels make. There are only a few pages from the Broodlord’s point of view, but those brief moments still manage to give a chilling glimpse into the Genestealer mind. Overall, it’s absolutely worth picking up if you can find a copy. It’s short, but it delivers exactly what it promises: a tense, atmospheric dive into one of the Blood Angels’ most infamous battles.














