---
product_id: 130032851
title: "Halo: Silentium"
price: "SAR 18"
currency: SAR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.com.sa/products/130032851-halo-silentium
store_origin: SA
region: Saudi Arabia
---

# Halo: Silentium

**Price:** SAR 18
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

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- **What is this?** Halo: Silentium
- **How much does it cost?** SAR 18 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.com.sa](https://www.desertcart.com.sa/products/130032851-halo-silentium)

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## Description

desertcart.com: Halo: Silentium (Audible Audio Edition): Greg Bear, Euan Morton, Simon & Schuster Audio / Halo Books: Audible Books & Originals

Review: A Tragic, Cohesive, and Unforgettable Finale - This book is epic. I don’t want to overhype it, but Silentium uses narrative tragedy to unlock an emotional depth in its characters that I haven’t seen elsewhere. You see them in entirely different colors from beginning to end, taking dramatic actions and growing in ways that feel both unexpected and earned. The series transitions from political maneuvering to literal life-and-death stakes for a race that is supposed to be vastly more advanced and sophisticated than humanity. What makes it work is how those characters interpret and navigate those stakes. Their decisions feel believable, even when the consequences are catastrophic. If you were at all disappointed with Halo: Primordium, it is absolutely worth pushing through to reach this book. Silentium is where everything clicks. The dots finally connect. The mysterious figures teased in Cryptum and Primordium are given full perspective, developed into the legends they’re remembered as, and stress-tested against the adversity those earlier books only alluded to. You also get genuinely cinematic battles that will resonate with anyone who loved playing the Halo games, brought vividly to life through Greg Bear’s writing. Bear does an especially impressive job bridging the narrative gap between Primordium and Halo 4, which released before Primordium. I’ve read that he was surprised by some of the ways his characters were handled in Halo 4, but you would never know that from the books. Even with the intentionally disorienting string structure, the big picture remains cohesive. The character arcs stay believable, and the way everything is arranged makes it feel as though Bear was steering the story the entire time. This book does not feel like a 400+ page novel. It’s the definition of a can’t-put-it-down read. I only wish there were more prequels to bridge the gap between Silentium and the rest of the series. Starting with these three books in chronological order almost feels like a mistake, because this truly feels like peak Halo. Part of me wishes I had saved it for last. It’s hard to believe this isn’t the ceiling of the series, and I genuinely hope it’s not all downhill from here.
Review: A Thoroughly Satisfying Conclusion to the Forerunner Series - WOW! This was an incredibly good read. Greg Bear has done a remarkable job here, and I cannot imagine a more worthy conclusion to the Forerunner series. I absolutely loved Cryptum, with its fresh insights into the mysterious Forerunners and its compelling narrative style, but hated Primordium, boring and needlessly drawn out as it was. For anyone who worried that Silentium might continue in the direction of Primordium, fear not! Silentium is more like Cryptum 2.0, an even better version of the book that got me hooked so thoroughly at the outset of the Forerunner series. Avid Halo devotees will not be left wanting. Many mysteries that have long plagued Halo fans attain satisfying resolutions within this book, and I found myself with a heightened appreciation for the Forerunners, the Flood, and mankind. After my read-through, it became abundantly clear why the release date was pushed back; this book is a highly effective, deeply informative tie-in to Halo 4; it would have prematurely informed fans about many vital plot elements found in the game, thereby ruining the "aura of mystery" and the "appeal of the unknown" which permeated Halo 4's storyline. Silentium has a substantially different narrative style from the previous two books. Instead of using one character as the chief storyteller (Bornstellar/Chakas), Bear uses a wide variety of characters (and styles) to tell the story. For fear of revealing too much of the plot, I won't go into detail about whom exactly these storytellers are. Most are familiar, and I'm sure many are easily guessed. Overall, I enjoyed this change. It lent a certain richness to the storytelling, as each character's strand combined to form a cohesive and compelling narrative tapestry. Pacing was also improved; with the constant cycling of perspective, I never found myself bored. There was also a heightened degree of urgency and suspense gained in this change, a la George R.R. Martin. Right as something important is about to happen, the perspective may change, urging you to read on to discover what happens next. Needless to say, I tore through this book in record time. My only real criticism is tied directly to the aforementioned narrative change. I found myself far less attached to characters than I had been in Crpytum; my emotional capital was far less invested in any singular character. I personally found this to be an enjoyable element of Cryptum, and mourn for its loss here. That being said, the scope of Silentium's story is far larger than Cryptum's ever was, so expecting Bear to get me as attached to characters as he had previously is deeply unfair. I understand that, and accept it, but still thought it worthy of mentioning. In the end, Silentium was a high-quality ending to the Forerunner series, and I don't regret a moment I invested in reading it. A big shout-out goes to Greg Bear for lending his skill and sci-fi know how to enriching the Halo universe. A weak middle book did not prevent him from concluding what he'd started so well in a laudable manner, and for that I thank him. Well done, sir, well done. Finishing this fight, Chris

## Images

![Halo: Silentium - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81yNv5OjnvL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A Tragic, Cohesive, and Unforgettable Finale
*by E***S on January 22, 2026*

This book is epic. I don’t want to overhype it, but Silentium uses narrative tragedy to unlock an emotional depth in its characters that I haven’t seen elsewhere. You see them in entirely different colors from beginning to end, taking dramatic actions and growing in ways that feel both unexpected and earned. The series transitions from political maneuvering to literal life-and-death stakes for a race that is supposed to be vastly more advanced and sophisticated than humanity. What makes it work is how those characters interpret and navigate those stakes. Their decisions feel believable, even when the consequences are catastrophic. If you were at all disappointed with Halo: Primordium, it is absolutely worth pushing through to reach this book. Silentium is where everything clicks. The dots finally connect. The mysterious figures teased in Cryptum and Primordium are given full perspective, developed into the legends they’re remembered as, and stress-tested against the adversity those earlier books only alluded to. You also get genuinely cinematic battles that will resonate with anyone who loved playing the Halo games, brought vividly to life through Greg Bear’s writing. Bear does an especially impressive job bridging the narrative gap between Primordium and Halo 4, which released before Primordium. I’ve read that he was surprised by some of the ways his characters were handled in Halo 4, but you would never know that from the books. Even with the intentionally disorienting string structure, the big picture remains cohesive. The character arcs stay believable, and the way everything is arranged makes it feel as though Bear was steering the story the entire time. This book does not feel like a 400+ page novel. It’s the definition of a can’t-put-it-down read. I only wish there were more prequels to bridge the gap between Silentium and the rest of the series. Starting with these three books in chronological order almost feels like a mistake, because this truly feels like peak Halo. Part of me wishes I had saved it for last. It’s hard to believe this isn’t the ceiling of the series, and I genuinely hope it’s not all downhill from here.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A Thoroughly Satisfying Conclusion to the Forerunner Series
*by C***E on March 20, 2013*

WOW! This was an incredibly good read. Greg Bear has done a remarkable job here, and I cannot imagine a more worthy conclusion to the Forerunner series. I absolutely loved Cryptum, with its fresh insights into the mysterious Forerunners and its compelling narrative style, but hated Primordium, boring and needlessly drawn out as it was. For anyone who worried that Silentium might continue in the direction of Primordium, fear not! Silentium is more like Cryptum 2.0, an even better version of the book that got me hooked so thoroughly at the outset of the Forerunner series. Avid Halo devotees will not be left wanting. Many mysteries that have long plagued Halo fans attain satisfying resolutions within this book, and I found myself with a heightened appreciation for the Forerunners, the Flood, and mankind. After my read-through, it became abundantly clear why the release date was pushed back; this book is a highly effective, deeply informative tie-in to Halo 4; it would have prematurely informed fans about many vital plot elements found in the game, thereby ruining the "aura of mystery" and the "appeal of the unknown" which permeated Halo 4's storyline. Silentium has a substantially different narrative style from the previous two books. Instead of using one character as the chief storyteller (Bornstellar/Chakas), Bear uses a wide variety of characters (and styles) to tell the story. For fear of revealing too much of the plot, I won't go into detail about whom exactly these storytellers are. Most are familiar, and I'm sure many are easily guessed. Overall, I enjoyed this change. It lent a certain richness to the storytelling, as each character's strand combined to form a cohesive and compelling narrative tapestry. Pacing was also improved; with the constant cycling of perspective, I never found myself bored. There was also a heightened degree of urgency and suspense gained in this change, a la George R.R. Martin. Right as something important is about to happen, the perspective may change, urging you to read on to discover what happens next. Needless to say, I tore through this book in record time. My only real criticism is tied directly to the aforementioned narrative change. I found myself far less attached to characters than I had been in Crpytum; my emotional capital was far less invested in any singular character. I personally found this to be an enjoyable element of Cryptum, and mourn for its loss here. That being said, the scope of Silentium's story is far larger than Cryptum's ever was, so expecting Bear to get me as attached to characters as he had previously is deeply unfair. I understand that, and accept it, but still thought it worthy of mentioning. In the end, Silentium was a high-quality ending to the Forerunner series, and I don't regret a moment I invested in reading it. A big shout-out goes to Greg Bear for lending his skill and sci-fi know how to enriching the Halo universe. A weak middle book did not prevent him from concluding what he'd started so well in a laudable manner, and for that I thank him. Well done, sir, well done. Finishing this fight, Chris

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Wonderful Conclusion
*by L***1 on March 30, 2017*

So it seems that the author didn't want to repeat what he did with the second book, and took great things from the first book and expanded on that. Everyone who knows halo knows what happened to the forerunners. The question is how did it get to that. And here we have our answer. All the characters from the first book return which is great. You get a understanding of the politics in forerunner society. You also get to see how mendicant bias is delt with and how he will eventually play a role in halo 3 (terminals). In this book you truly see on a wide scale how the flood is unstoppable. You see how the forerunners are absolutely struggling in the battle and they are also struggling from within. What makes this book standout from the first two is that the pacing is faster and you are always finding out something new. In the end it was a great finish to the saga. Honestly if I re-read these books again I will 100% skip the second book and go straight into this one. The thing is you don't really need to read the second book to go into this one because it goes over the events that happened. And there weren't many events that happened. The ribirth part definitely finishes on a high note. The verdict: Great pacing Returning characters Inner conflicts are interesting Great Character struggles Filled with suspense The only bad thing is that some of the character motives and actions don't fit the character. example: master builder

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*Store origin: SA*
*Last updated: 2026-04-30*