Ciaphas Cain Caves Of Ice Audiobook
The audiobook captures every sweaty-palmed escape, every dry footnote, and every explosive coincidence with pitch-perfect delivery. Stephen Perring is Ciaphas Cain. By the time you hear him mutter about Jurgen’s unholy body odor saving the day for the hundredth time, you will be smiling.
One of his most beloved adventures, Caves of Ice , has received the full audio treatment. For fans of military sci-fi, dark comedy, and unreliable narrators, the is not just a listening experience—it’s a masterclass in character-driven Warhammer 40,000 storytelling. What is Caves of Ice ? (A Plot Primer) Before discussing the audiobook’s production, let’s set the scene. Caves of Ice , written by Sandy Mitchell , is the second novel in the Ciaphas Cain series (chronologically following For the Emperor ), though it stands perfectly well on its own.
In print, these footnotes are charming. In audio, they are transformative. ciaphas cain caves of ice audiobook
The plot is delightfully simple in premise, gloriously chaotic in execution:
4.8/5 Best enjoyed with: A hot beverage (tanna tea, if you have it) and a healthy sense of irony for the Imperium of Man. Have you listened to the Ciaphas Cain Caves of Ice audiobook? Do you prefer Perring’s Cain to the older Toby Longworth narrations? Let us know in the comments below, and for the Emperor—keep listening. The audiobook captures every sweaty-palmed escape, every dry
The Ciaphas Cain series is the perfect gateway drug for Warhammer 40k newcomers who find the setting too bleak, and it is a refreshing palate cleanser for veterans. Caves of Ice represents the series at its tightest: one planet, two terrifying enemy factions, and one self-serving commissar who just wants a warm cup of tanna tea.
In the frozen caves of Simia Orichalcae, surrounded by Orks and Necrons, Cain discovers that the safest place is often the eye of the storm. And the safest way to experience that storm? Headphones on, volume up, and the Caves of Ice audiobook playing. One of his most beloved adventures, Caves of
In the grim darkness of the 41st millennium, there is only war—and, if you are very lucky, the sardonic, self-preserving wit of Commissar Ciaphas Cain. Among the pantheon of Black Library’s literary heroes, Cain stands apart. He isn’t a noble Space Marine or a zealous Inquisitor; he is a man who desperately wants to be anywhere other than the front lines, yet constantly finds himself accidentally hailed as a hero.