An Inquisitor's War
Eisenhorn is Dan Abnett's landmark trilogy about Gregor Eisenhorn, an Inquisitor of the Imperium tasked with rooting out threats that ordinary citizens are never meant to know exist. Gathered into a single omnibus, the sequence collects three novels: Xenos, Malleus, and Hereticus. Together they trace one man's career across several decades, following his investigations as they spiral from a routine hunt for a heretical text into confrontations with alien conspiracies, forbidden knowledge, and the daemonic powers of the Chaos daemons.
Eisenhorn belongs to the Ordos of the Inquisition, the shadowy authority that stands above the ordinary institutions of the Imperium of Man. He and his retinue enjoy near-limitless license to interrogate, seize, and execute in defense of humanity. The trilogy uses that authority to ask an uncomfortable question: how much darkness can a righteous person embrace before they become the thing they hunt? Across the three books, Eisenhorn begins as a comparatively principled puritan and, case by case, edges toward the radical philosophy that permits an agent to turn the enemy's own weapons against them.
Why It Is Recommended for Newcomers
For readers wondering where to begin with Warhammer 40,000 fiction, Eisenhorn is one of the most frequently suggested starting points, and it appears near the top of most any 40K reading order. It works so well as an entry point because it does not assume prior knowledge. Rather than opening on a galactic battlefield packed with unfamiliar factions, it follows a single investigator through a detective-style narrative, letting the setting reveal itself gradually through the cases he pursues.
Because an Inquisitor's remit touches nearly everything, the trilogy also serves as a guided tour of the wider universe. Readers encounter the machinery of Imperial bureaucracy, the menace of alien life, the corruption of Chaos Space Marines and cultists, and the fraught politics of the Inquisition itself. It is grounded, human-scaled storytelling that makes an enormous and often intimidating setting feel navigable.
Tone and Appeal
Abnett writes Eisenhorn with the pacing of a thriller and the texture of noir. The books blend investigation, action, and moral tension, narrated in the first person by Eisenhorn himself, which lends the story an intimacy unusual for the setting. His voice, that of a man reflecting on choices he can no longer take back, gives the trilogy a confessional weight and makes his gradual compromise genuinely unsettling.
The supporting cast is a major part of the appeal. Eisenhorn's retinue, allies, and adversaries recur across the books, and their loyalties and fates carry real consequence. Members of the Imperial Agents and other servants of the Throne populate his world, and the relationships he forms become central to the emotional stakes of his descent.
What elevates the trilogy above straightforward adventure is its central argument about ends and means. Eisenhorn is not a simple hero; he is a competent, thoughtful man who repeatedly convinces himself that one more transgression is justified. Watching that self-justification accumulate is the real story. For anyone curious about the grim, morally grey heart of Warhammer 40,000, and looking for a smart, self-contained, character-driven place to begin, Eisenhorn remains a definitive recommendation, and it launched a wider saga that Abnett continued in the companion Ravenor books.