Whilst this will probably be the dumping grounds for any future stand-alone Eldar novels (that aren't done by CS Goto) or Dark Eldar novels, the current thread will be concerning Gav Thorpe's Path fo the Eldar series, and Andy Chambers Dark Eldar counterpart. As the Dark Eldar stuff has just been released I'll probably cover that after covering the Eldar stuff, even though Path of the Renegade came out before Path of the Outcast (and Path of the Incubus comes out this year.) Of the two, I'll admit I'm digging the Dark Eldar stuff more, which is actually surprising because I intended to dislike it, but the setting, pacing, and events are just more.. dramatic and interesting than the Eldar stuff.
The Path of the Eldar series is.. interesting. That's all I can really think to say of it. Its not perfect, but its not something I actually dislike. But it really doesn't have anything that gets me fired up or excited really. It really doesn't 'feel' as good as the first tow Last Chancers or Angels of Darkness did to me. Its more 'purging of Kadillus' maybe, with the benefit of not being about Space Marines. The main draw is to learn about the Eldar in more depth than you usually do, and society in general, and other aspects beyond the Craftworlds. We learn more about three main paths (Warrior, Seer, and Outcast) with each of the three novels, and we learn about lots of others. The main draw of the story is really its details and atmosphere, we get a glimpse of life and society that, while in some ways bleak, is actually not the outright grimdark of 40K. Life inside the craftworld is okay (until it gets attacked) and there's a definite feeling of 'isolation' between inside the craftworld and the galaxy at large (esp in the third book.)
Character wise... I can't say they recommend much. The best book character wise was Aradryan in 'Path of hte Outcast', but you're forced to slog through Thirianna and Korlandril to get there. Thirianna is a bit better, when she's actually learning to be a Seer, but getting ot that point is also rather tedious. Getting an Exarch's view of things was interesting in Path of the Warrior (and the ending suitably tragic and for me, at least, unexpected.) but that's bout the best I can say for it. The plot is okay, but I think the 'buildup' does not really deliver in terms of the ending. Without spoiling it, I can say I can kinda see what Gav was going for with the story (I think it was supreme irony and meant to play off the stuff pertaining to Path of the Seer and such.) but it just really didn't tie together as well as it could have. I did sort of like what he tried to do with the 'varying points of view on the same events' in principle, although again how it was executed was.. less than ideal. It just felt really dragging to revisit the same events from Path of the Warrior in Path of the Seer, which hindered that somewhat (it even felt, sometime,s like he was deliberately coping some passages word for word from one book to another.) Outcast is perhaps better, in that it has the same events going on but glosses over details we already know and truly shows the 'differeing POv' aspects. really its a good book to read the first time, but I'm not sure I would, personally, read it again. If you're an Eldar fan it might be good, or if you are a big fan of Gav's work in general. But if they had put it in hardcover (and were I not obsessively completionist) I probably would not have read it otherwise, because for me its a really mixed-bag series overall.
One other thing I *DID* like bout the series, and I do applaud Gav for.. is trying to expand on Eldar backstory and history, and society in general without being tied down to the codex crap. (or at least, if its already in the codex-oriented fluff, he's reusing old concepts in interesting ways. ) HE also tries to break stereotypes in some respects (Esp path of the outcast, as we'll learn.) which I also liked.
The first book of the Eldar Path series is Path of the Warrior. More specifically, aspect warriors (Guardians I gather are not interesting enough to explore.) Our protagonist is Korlandril, one of three friends (Thirianna and Aradryan) whose lives are closely intertwined with events soon to befall Altaioc Crafworld and have tremendous (and horrible) implications for the craftworld as a whole. Korlandril is a poet whose life seems driven to the warrior aspect after an acrimonious reunion with his companions, and becomes a Striking Scorpion. The interesting aspects of this lie primarily in the Eldar approach to warfare and the psychological impact it has on them, which echoes much of the psychology of the Eldar and the reason for the Paths (this, alongside the Exarch POV stuff, forms the most interesting aspect of the story.) Along the way we learn more about Exarchs (including Korlandril becoming one - big spoiler) and we even get some perspective on Phoenix Lords.
As a character, Korlandril was perhaps the most unlikable for me. He was pretty selfish, and not very honest, but this may be deliberate as a reflection of how alien the eldar are, and how extreme their emotiosn can be (and the dangers it can lead to, since his emotions play a huge role in him becoming a warrior in the first place.) My dislike more than likely stems from a 'humanocentric' view of things.. its different than what I am used to or expect, so it feels 'wrong'. Which in a way probably reflects a positive aspect in the book. I do feel that Korlandril comes into his own more later in the story, and even becomes the tragic figure in it.
As an aside this book also has the most extensive views into Eldar 'civilian' life.. the non-military paths and the roles they play (path of service, path of Dreaming, path of the artist or poet, path of healing.) which is the good part (only dragged down by the tedium of the Korlandril-Aradryan-Thirianna interactions.) We learn about the various aspect Shrines and some of their past (at least on altaioc), and about Autarchs as well, but much of the 'discovery' is simply learning about this particular craftworld.
So again rambling aside, we start the story:
Page 11
Strking scorpion pistols firing mono discs.His warriors followed him, pistols spitting hails of molecule-thin discs..
Page 12
Shuriken catapults shredding a man.The Dire Avengers returned fire, unleashing a storm from their shuriken catapults through the window. His body shredded by the fusillade..
Page 16
Exterior of Craftworld Altaioc. described as a "continent" suggesting it perhaps spans hundreds if not thousands of kilometers in either direction (although the "hudnred kilometre wings" seem bigger, so that might limit its size in this context)Bathed in the radioactive glow of Mirianathir’s death throes, a craftworld floated upon the stellar winds; an artificial, disc-like continent of glowing domes and silvery energy sails, arcing bridges and glittering towers. Wings unfurled, the craftworld soaked in life-giving energy, an inorganic plant with mirrored leaves a hundred kilometres long. Surrounded by the ruddy light of the dying star, Craftworld Alaitoc absorbed all that Mirianathir had to offer, capturing every particle and stellar breeze, feeding it through the spirits of its infinity circuit to sustain the craftworld for a thousand more years.
Also, it has solar sails or wings of some kind to absorb sunlight from "a hundred kilometre" long leaves. Apparenlty its absorbng the sunlight to sustain the craftworld and the infinity circuit - interesting, considering that the circuit itself is supposed to be the power source. Maybe they need the sunlight to sustain the circuit itself - a sort of catalyst.
Page 17
The space around Alaitoc was as full of movement and energy as the star upon which it fed. Ships whirled and swerved, tacking across the stellar winds, refuelling their own energy stores. The webway gate behind the craftworld swirled and ebbed, a shimmering portal into the space between the material and immaterial. Trade ships with long fluted hulls slipped into and out of the gate; sleek destroyers with nightblue hulls prowled through the traffic, weapons batteries armed, torpedoes loaded; slender yachts darted amongst the shoal of vessels; majestic battleships eased along stately paths through the ordered commotion.
orbital activity around Altaioc. Trading and military patrols, as well as civilian yachts (and battleships) all in orbit. All ships seem to be absorbing energy from the stellar wind as well as a power source.
Perhaps this is the importance of the sails - they are meant to draw energy from a star in much the same way a TIE fighter was (supposedly) powered by solar panels.
Page 17
5 km long "dock tower". since I doubt this reprensents the bulk of the Craftworld's length or width, this sets an extreme lower limit.. probably suggesting the thing is more tens of km at the very least.The dock tower stretched five kilometres out from the plane of the craftworld, encased in a bluish aura that kept at bay the ravening emptiness of space. Like a narwhal’s horn, the tower spiralled into the darkness, hundreds of figures along its length, lining the elegant gantries and curving walkways. Eldar of all Paths had come to greet their long-travelled ship: poets, engineers, autarchs, gardeners, farseers, Aspect Warriors, stylists and chartmakers.
Page 22
Path of the artiest. Notice the details involved in that particular path. I suspect that the Eldar apply the same level of detail ability to all Paths, which in turn means that one Path can provide at least some insight/knowledge into another as far as physical capability goes, but the knowledge (the key element) differs.Even amongst the eldar such subtle differences might have been missed, but Korlandril was dedicated to the Path of the Artist and had honed his observation and attention to detail to a level bordering on the microscopic. He noticed everything, remembered every nuance and facet, and he knew from his deep studies that everything had a meaning, whether intended or not.
In other words - they have to learn to think differently in a respective path, but the physical skills they possess (the physical potential, that is) remains the same.
Page 28
A kind of psychoplastic I suppose.. warp created stone? I imagine they can create plastics, metal and stone from the warp to some degree or another. Or at least, an emulation of it.He knew the ghost stone was not at fault. It was possessed of no will, no spirit. It merely reacted to his input, shaping itself under his gentle psychic manipulation. It was inert now, but Korlandril sensed a certain smugness in its unwillingness to cooperate, even as another part of his mind told him that he was simply projecting his frustrations onto an inanimate object.
Again we see how psychic and mental elements of things are important to Eldar society and paths. Also note how our Artist is heavily reliant upon using his psychic abilities to make things - I suspect that this talent could be, with training and knowledge, applied on other paths (craftman or shipbuilding)
page 54
Psychically controlled civilian skimmer vehicles. It's never specified (here at least) whether he owns the vehicle or if they belong to the entire Craftworld, but I suspect the latter. Things like vehicles and living quarters do not seem to be "owned" and anyone is free to move in where they choose (as long as it doesnt conflict with another)Korlandril took a skyrunner across the dome, delighting in the rush of air against his skin, the flash of terrace and tree beneath the one-pilot craft as it soared upon the winds, its wings angling and curving in tune with his thoughts.
..
Powered by his psychic urging, the dart-like vehicle climbed rapidly, wings tilted back...
...
In his mind his path sculpted a complex web of interleaving arcs and loops and the skyrunner responded, twirling and swooping at his whim.
IOW: Filthy psychic socialist Space Elves.
Page 55
Hundreds of Eldar in traffic. Almost certainly an underestimate.Here there was more traffic. It was one of the main thoroughfares of Alaitoc where hundreds of eldar moved between the many domes and plateaus that made up the bulk of the craftworld. Some strolled languidly by themselves or with friends, others on skyrunners like Korlandril, many on drifting platforms that eased serenely from one place to the next guided by the group desires of those on board.
Page 56
The way a Craftworld functions, as outlined here, would suggest that the place is almost full of psychic signals, imprints and generally any kind of psychic data, which any one Eldar ca nbe aware of or pick up on. It forms, in fact, what might be described as sort of a self contained psychic internet, where every individual eldar is innnately connected and can do the psychic equivalent of blogging/tweeting/facebooking when thy choose, learn whta they must, or control things. This may suggest one facet of what the Inifinty Circuit does, in fact, and it meshes with the known capability of Wraithbone to act as a communication medium.Oval in cross-section, the tunnel glowed with a warm orange light, flutters of energy pulsing along infinity circuit conduits embedded within the material of the wall. Korlandril felt their ghostly presence all around him as he dived deeper into the craftworld’s interior, the psychic energy of the craftworld’s spirits merging and dividing around him, whispering at his subconscious.
Page 57
Eldar apartment and interaction with other eldar. All psychic, even the doorbell.Finding the Opal Suites, Korlandril touched the infinity plate to announce his presence. He waited for a moment and no response came. Allowing his fingers to linger longer on the psychically conductive slate, he sought for the presence of Aradryan but could not detect it. Only a residual impression of Aradryan remained in this place.
Adjusting his thoughts, Korlandril found that the adjoining apartment was occupied and he made an inquiry to the eldar within. She appeared at the archway a little later. She was of considerable antiquity, surrounded by an aura of wisdom and solemnity. From the brief contact he had shared with her on the infinity circuit, he knew that she was Herisianith, a shuttle pilot.
Page 73
The way this sounds is like Eldar are almost sharks - they kepe moving or they die (or rather, worse than death.) Eldar coping mechanisms seem to be focused on change and variety - trying to distract themselves from whatever it is might destroy them or they become like Exarchs. Hence the Path system."You know that it is unwise to become trapped in ourselves. Our lives must be in constant motion, moving from one Path to the next, developing our senses of self and the universe. To over-indulge leads to the darkness that came before. It attracts the attention of… Her. She Who Thirsts.”
...
His waystone quivered with him, becoming chill to the touch. All that Thirianna said was true, enshrined in the teachings of the craftworlds; the whole structure of their society created to avoid a return to the debauchery and excesses that led to the Fall.
It also explains why Exarchs (depsite being important) are shunned and segregated.
Page 79
Emotional control is important to craftworld eldar, as others can pick up on it and it can even affect/harm the craftworld itself.He was in no state to be interacting with the infinity circuit. His emotional instability would be sure to attract attention of the wrong kind, if it didn’t do any actual harm to him or the circuit. Even if he could muster enough self-control to navigate the circuit properly, Abrahasil would not be able to help him.
Page 80
The Eldar equivalent of email or texting I think.Amidst the maelstrom of his thoughts, Korlandril’s attention was brought to a small matter that needed resolving. A thought-cycle demanded his attention, a futurememory yet to be experienced. Korlandril analysed it and was reminded of the appointment he had made with Arthuis and Maerthuin. He linked the reminder with a memory and cycled them together with his current feelings.
Page 80
Yes, there is a path of service. I actually don't mind that, since it shows the Eldar society to be far more faceted and interesting than the game itself shows... their entire society must be dictated by a sort of self interest that promotes more altruistic outcomes (Warriors serve because they need an outlet, but they channel it to serve the Craftworld. Craftsman do the same.. as do the Servers.The new cycle was just beginning and there were many eldar sat at the tables along the balcony or moving between them and the food bars on the inward side. They ate fruits from the orchards and breakfasted on spiced meats brought back by traders with the Exodite worlds. Drinks of all colours, some luminescent, others effervescent, were dispensed from tall, slender urns or arranged in rows of glittering bottles, regularly replenished by those walking the Path of Service. A dampening field kept the conversation quiet, though there were thousands of voices raised in greeting and debate, departure and conciliation.
Also note there are a mere thousands of Eldar just in this one locale. There must be far more restraunts and other locales with similar numbers.. suggesting craftworlds possess at least tens if not hundreds of thousands of Eldar.
Page 86-87
Discussion of the Warrior paths, their necessity, how they are recognized, and what the alternatives are.“The hand of Khaine has reached into you and awoken that which dwells within all of us. You cannot ignore this. If it does not destroy you, it could harm others.”
...
“You must learn to understand your fear and your anger before you can control them,” said Maerthuin. “Always they have been with you, but we hide them so well. Now you must bring them into the light and confront them. Your rage is growing in power over you. It is not something you can fight, for such desires fuel themselves. Nor can you expunge them from your spirit, no more than you can stop breathing. It is part of you and always will be. All you can do now is find the means by which you can contain it, turn its energy elsewhere.” “And keep it contained when it is not needed,” added Arthuis.
...
“It is the division of creation and destruction that you need, the split between peace and war, life and death. Look around you. Are we not peaceful now, we who have killed so many? The Path of the Warrior is the path of outer war and inner peace.”
“The alternative is exile,”
Page 89
Inter-craftworld travel.A soft hum heralded its arrival, pulsing from the tunnelway to the left a moment before the shuttle whispered alongside the platform and came to a standstill, a chain of bullet-shaped compartments hovering just above the anti-grav rail.
Page 96
Striking Scorpions Exarch on Altaioc.Its face was a heavy mask, with a serrated grille for a mouth, flanked by bulbous pods, framed with segmented finger-thick black cables for hair, which moved with a life of their own. Green and golden plates slid across each other as it stood, fully a head taller than Korlandril.
Page 104-105
Discussion fo the Warriro paths and their need. Basically the whole point of Paths is to create the right kind of outlet (At the right time for the right lenght of time) to channel an Eldar's emotions and psychic power into, until that path is no longer sufficient. Then they move on. It's a process that kinda "evolves" the Eldar over time.. rather interesting.“You must learn two ways, the paths to both war and peace, in equal measure. That which we unleash, the face of battle we wear, is as a war-mask. You must put it on, within your spirit alone, and then take it off. Peace must be the goal, war helps us achieve this peace, and then balance comes. It must be a choice, shunning war and death and blood, choosing life and hope. You must make that choice, in every part of life, so that you are free. War is a not a state, it is an absence of peace, a passing nightmare. We awake from it, not remembering its curse, divorced from its taint. We must become death, to protect and to survive, but do not love death.”
...
I stay in this shrine, where my curse cannot harm you, forever trapped here. Though I wear no paint, my war-mask remains inside, clouding all my thoughts. Had you angered me, that first day you came to me, I might have killed you. Even now I hate, filled with my anger always, but I do not strike. It is not madness, not uncontrollable ire, which my war-mask brings. It is an urging, to release what is inside, fighting to get out. I struggle with it, but I am its true master, exerting my will. It is no frenzy, no bloodlust that would swamp me, but a perspective. I see things unseen, pain and misery beneath, which others hide from. It is my duty, the covenant of exarchs, to prepare your mind. You will see horror, witness death and agony, and must confront it. This is my calling, to lead you on that dark path, where others recoil.”
another interesting aspect is the war/peace angle. Warrior paths help "peace" by giving the Eldar an acceptable outlet for his anger, as wlel as teaching the ways to control and channel those emotions. An Eldar on an aspect is almost a different person than they might have been in a prior aspect, although they retain some knowledge of the past aspect (although as a distant thing) It's also kinda weird, in it sounds laot like a form of multipe-personality disorder - eldar literally remake themselves with a new Path.
Anyhow, once they learn the Warrior Path, they seem to be able to indefinitely segregate off that anger until they need it. I imagine it builds and amplifies until that time, meaning it is sort of a psychic "battery" of rage and battle power they can draw on. That's just conjecture, but it would help explain some things.
Page 106-107
Again note how Anger seems to be the means in which an Eldar taps his warrior side. Whilst they do train with weapons and such, much of an Aspect Warrior's training seems to be of the mind and the psyche - basically "forging" it into the proper aspect. They call it a mask I believe (which is interesting because the Harlequins use similar terminology also.) Like their technology, Eldar means of warfare seems to be driven more by their psychic natures than by purely phyiscal things - where the psychic bit goes the body follows, I guess.Every nerve tingled with vibrant life. He saw the colours of the swamp with a clarity he had not witnessed even as an Artist. Every ripple shone in his mind; every chirrup, scratch and burr of insect sounded distinct in his ears. The faintest breeze on his flesh, the feel of the mud between his toes and the coolness of the water on his skin. His waystone was like a white-hot coal over his heart. Everything stood out in sharp contrast and for that moment Korlandril felt an urge to destroy it all.
...
“It was your anger, bringing heightened awareness, which you felt just now. Our hate is our strength, not some weakness to be purged, if we use it well.”
Page 107
Again mind/psychic elements play as much or greater a role in Aspect Warrior training. Makes sense when you consider their psychic powers probably boost their phyiscla prowess....Korlandril exerted ever greater control over his mind and body. The two became as one; the physical effort of maintaining the strenuous Striking Scorpion fighting poses narrowed his focus, concentrating his thoughts to a single point. Whenever he deviated from the routines set for him by Kenainath, Korlandril struggled and lost his balance, physically and mentally.
Page 109
Aspect Shrines are sort of areas of confinement, where risky eldar like Korlandril are segregated from the populace until they learn to control themselves better. Again, Paths are ultimately about emotional/mental/psychic control, because the Warp is a manifestation of all of those, and the Eldar are a highly psychic race.“It will not be safe, you cannot yet control the hate, and could blindly strike out.”
...
He had acted without conscious thought, but he could feel the desire to inflict hurt that had driven the reflex.
..
“Now you understand, that which we are creating, safe here in the shrine,”
...
“This is your war-mask, expanding from within you, consuming your mind.” The exarch’s tone was unforgiving, with no hint of shame or comfort. “It is for battle, where you cannot hesitate, but act or react. Do not be worried, you will learn to remove the mask, I will teach you how.”
...
“Until you wear it, you cannot remove the mask, it is still hidden. In time you will learn, be free of the mask’s control, and then you can leave.”
Page 112-113
Aspect Warriors are drawn to their suits. Again the strong psychic element,and it implies that even the aspect warrior armor may have a degree of psychic awareness.Korlandril looked around, wondering which suit to pick. At first they seemed identical, but there were subtle differences; in the placement of gems, the hang of the hair-like sensory antenna-crests of the helmets, the brightly coloured ribbons tied about the armoured limbs.
...
Out of the corner of his eye, Korlandril thought he saw a momentary glitter in the eyes of one suit. He turned towards it. There was nothing to distinguish it from the others, but something about it tugged at Korlandril.
Page 113
As I speculated before, it seems that there can be certain base.. potentials or similarities amongst the various paths, that allow the translation from one to the other to go smooth as long as the mental/psychic aspects are properly learned and employed. This means that even the nonmilitary paths can instill a degree of ability when war is drawn upon - most especially when it comes to Guardians.Now that he was stood beside his armour, Korlandril looked on what had passed with fresh eyes. Just as he had learned to control the ghost stone as a sculptor, now he controlled every muscle and fibre of his body. It was an instrument wholly subservient to his will and whim.
Page 113
Importance of spirit stones. It seems possible that the stone acts as a shield/barrier against psychic detection by Slaanesh, given this.He took his waystone on its silver chain and placed it carefully in a niche in the wall. He felt a quiver of fear at being separated from his spirit-saviour. It was perhaps his imagining, but Korlandril felt a moment of scrutiny, as if detecting eyes suddenly upon him, regarding him from a great distance. He dismissed his unease, knowing that nothing could befall him in the shrine.
PAge 114
Donning the aspect armor . again note how the thing seems to have a degree of awareness. Although it could be that the aspect armor is meant to be psychically attuned to te wearer and respond to its thuoghts/desires/impulses automatically. That would be consistent with all other Eldar tech at least.Korlandril stepped into the legs of the bodysuit. It was large and sagged on his limbs and gathered in unsightly bulges between his legs and under his arms, its
fingertips dangling uselessly.
..
He placed his palms together in front of his face, copying the movements of the other Aspect Warriors. In response, the body suit tightened. As the fabric of the suit shrank against his taut muscles, dormant pads began to thicken, forming rigid areas across his chest and stomach and along the bulge of his thighs, stiffening along his spine.
That could also mean that the previous "attachment" where Korlandril and others are drawn to a specific suit is more a result of some sort of resonance - Korlandril is drawn ot the armour that best suits his mental/emotional state, and the one he is best suited to employ.
Page 114-115
More data on donning the armor. The suits shift and adjust in response to his body, which includes in combat to maximizing protection.Reaching behind the armour, he undid the fastenings along its back, letting the lower portion of the torso fall free in his hands. Wrapping it about his stomach and lower back, his nimble fingers worked the fastenings back into place. Its stiff presence around his midsection was reassuring, supporting his back, squeezing against his sides in a firm embrace.
..
..Korlandril undid the clasps fixing the upper part of the armour to its stand. He lifted it above his head, solid but not heavy. With careful movements he lowered it onto his shoulders. The plates gripped the surface of the undersuit, extending down his upper arms; the rounded bulge of the power generator slipped easily across his shoulder blades. As before, he returned to a stance of repose and the suit shifted slightly with a life of its own, adjusting itself to his body. When it had stopped moving, he tightened the clasps, fixing the armour in place. He felt top-heavy and adjusted his back to stand straighter.
A moment of fear made Korlandril tremble as the bodysuit extended up towards his face, enclosing his throat and neck, the touch of rippling ridges insistent but gentle. The moment passed as soon as it stopped just below his chin.
Page 115-116
More on the adaptive nature of Aspect armour, enhancing stability and balance as well as bracing. Eldar aspect armour runs off its own power pack as well. And Aspect armour adjusts its size/volume to fit the wearer best.The upper leg armour came next, fitting to Korlandril as snugly as the rest of the suit. He found that if he flexed in a certain way, the plates interlocked delicately, strengthening his stance, offsetting the imbalance of the powerpack.
...
The lower legs were each protected by a single boot-greave piece, which Korlandril slipped over his feet and knees. He fastened these to the thigh armour, fully encasing his legs. Threads of material grew rigid around his ankles, adding additional support, while the boots shortened themselves to fit his feet. A sensation of solidity, of unmoving permanence, filled Korlandril.
Page 116
almost done. I wonder at why they have to take the waystone off to don all this stuff. maybe the waystone "links in" to the suit somehow.The vambrace-gauntlets connected to the upper armour, more clasps linking the two as one. Korlandril flexed his arms, feeling cartilage-like tendrils tightening against his flesh, reinforcing his wrists and elbows. Now fully clad save for his face, Korlandril felt incredible, filled with a heat that did not waver. His armour was his skin; it pulsed along with his thundering heart, drawing life from him and returning its strength.
His next act was to retrieve his waystone from its niche, detaching it from the silver surround of the necklace. It responded to his touch, warming gently, suffusing him with delicate reassurance. He placed the waystone into the aperture of the chestplate. It settled home with a soft click. His armour felt the waystone’s presence as much as Korlandril, giving a brief, almost imperceptible quiver and then falling still again.
Page 116
Like space marine power armor, Eldar Aspect armour seems to be self-supporting once its active and fully donned, so the wearer feels like he is naked.Korlandril took a step forward, the movement feeling awkward in the armour; its weight was evenly spread across him, but its bulk restricted normal movement. In response, he changed the nature of his stride, his body remembering the motions he had learnt while unencumbered. As strange and stylised as they had felt in his robe, they were natural when armour-clad.
Page 117
Another benefit of the psychic mastery/psychic bond of the Eldar race - Aspect Warriors have incredible degrees of coordination.. in combat I imagine they complement each other without even needing to think about it.Almost like automatons they mirrored the exarch’s thrusts and parries, like marionettes all controlled by the same strings.
Korlandril felt a sense of belonging he had not known for a long time, in perfect synchronisation with his fellow warriors. He was as them, and they were as he; of one mind and one function. Every stance brought a fresh thrill, as he learnt anew their purpose. The armour made him complete, his body now perfected.
Page 118
Again the Jedi-like nature of Aspect Warrior training/combat. Just without the throwing of objects.As he removed each component, Korlandril felt a lightening in his spirit as well as on his body. Though he had felt relaxed throughout the practice, he realised he had been functioning at a far higher state of awareness than normal. Colours seemed a little blander, sounds more muted as he brought himself down from the peak of physical attentiveness and assumed a more relaxed demeanour.
Page 120
Some Eldar can come to craftworlds, or even Aspect Shrines, a complete mystery. This tends to suggest that non-Craftworld Eldar can join and or leave at will.The name startled Korlandril, for it meant Spirit on the Wind; an appellation given to those whose true identity was not known, usually a stranger. It was also a euphemism for those that had died without the protection of a waystone, their spirits lost to the clutches of She Who Thirsts.
...
“Kenainath brought him to us with that name, and neither has told us anything else. Do not be fooled by his silence, he is a capable warrior.”
Page 120
Not sure what a "pass" is but I'm guessing years... meaning a 500 year old Eldar.He was of venerable age, probably five hundred passes older or more, with a sharp brow and aquiline nose.
Page 121-122
They also mention the Exarch is the final decision on when someone is ready to join. Again there's nothing too regimented or standardized for training.. its all very individual, and personalized.. which emphasizes the mental/psychic nature of things. The "war mask" concept also emphasizes again the segregation that occurs in Eldar minds, the quasi multiple personality thing.“When you have mastered the arts of the fighting poses, you will join us on our hunts. We go out into the surrounds of the shrine and try to sneak up on each other. The Striking Scorpion is stealth as well as strength.”
..
“The war-mask is not a thing, it is a state of mind. You have come close to it, or you would not be here. You will know it when it comes. We cannot tell you what it will be like, for it is unique to each of us.”
Also we learn about the importance of stealth to Striking Scorpions.
Page 126
Again Aspect Armour is alot lke power armor, but even moreso (lacking even the faint noise of servomotors, etc.) which benefits the Striking Scoprion philosophy. I also suspect this is also due to the psychically responsive nature of the wraithbone the armor is made from - it "adapts" itself to the wearer's movements and the enviroment.Despite the bulk of the Striking Scorpion armour, Korlandril moved as soundlessly as if he were naked. So controlled and effortless was Korlandril’s motion, so attuned was he to the swaying of the branches and the slightest ripple of water, he was able to blend his movements to those of his surrounds.
Page 127
Like most Eldar technology, Stirking scorpion chainswords are psychically controlled/activated.Not quite knowing how, Korlandril walked directly to the arms that he knew belonged to his armour. He ran his fingers along the cladding of the chainsword, able to feel the entwining decorations through the empathic connection to his gauntlet as if he touched it with bare skin.
“Take up your weapon, let it become part of you, feel it in your hand,” said Kenainath.
Korlandril closed his fingers around the guarded hilt of the chainsword and lifted it easily from the curved wall bracket. Like his armour, it was surprisingly light for its size. It fitted snugly into his palm, like an extension of his arm. He twisted his wrist and examined the narrow blades, each sharp enough to slice through flesh and bone with a single stroke.
...
“How do I activate it?” he asked.
“How does your heart beat, your fingers move at your whim, that is the answer.”
Page 130-131
Some of the history pertaining to the Aspect Shrines. It's implied there may be other "fallen" Striking scorpions, or that the fallen exarch may have found his own "anti-shrine"“Asurmen was the first, the creator of the Path of the Warrior,” he said. “I guess it was Asurmen that discovered how to don the war-mask. He founded the first shrine and gathered disciples to teach, Arhra amongst them, the Father of Scorpions. Some dark fate befell Arhra, of which I do not know the story, and his greatest pupil Karandras took up the mantle and spread the teachings of the Striking Scorpion.”
“That is true enough, the briefest account of it, but you should know more,” replied Kenainath, crouching opposite his pupil, his eyes intent. “Arhra fell from grace, touched by the dark of Chaos, and betrayed his kin. He turned on the rest, brought daemons to the First Shrine, hungry for power. The Asurya, the first exarchs of the Path, fought against Arhra. They lost the battle, scattered to the distant stars, and Arhra escaped. He strayed from the Path, consumed by his ambition, and found new pupils. His teachings are wrong, a perversion of the Path, the Fallen Phoenix. It is a great wrong, one that we cannot forgive, the worst betrayal. Karandras hunts him, across the stars and webway, for retribution.”
“Arhra still lives? The tale of the Fallen Phoenix was mixed up with the other myths of the Fall. Not even the eldar had such long lives.”
“Who can say for sure, in the warp and the webway, time passes strangely.”
Note Arhra shows up in latter novels and is hinted at in tAndy Chambers DE series.
Page 138
More Jedi-like aspect to Aspect Warrior training, including the greater emphasis on the psychic rather than the physical.Distracted, he had reacted better than when he had been concentrating. It was not a matter of process, it was a matter of instinct. His body, his inner mind, knew better what to do than his conscious thoughts.
...
Korlandril could almost see without his eyes, hear without his ears. As never before, he felt enmeshed with his armour, the chainsword an extension of himself and not some foreign object gripped in his fist.
Page 139
Shuriken pistol's role in the Striking Scorpion aspect.Like his blade, it responded to his thoughts, firing a volley of monomolecular-edged discs that could slice flesh with ease. Though it could be used at some distance, the shuriken pistol in the hands of the Striking Scorpion was mainly a close combat weapon, complementing the cuts and parries of the chainsword. The sweeping movements Korlandril made with his left hand during the rituals became short bursts of fire, to distract or incapacitate the enemy whilst the chainsword delivered the killing blow.
Page 152
A signal sent out by the Avatar and the general way a call to war is disseminated.. pretty much the psychic equivalent of a red alert.It was a feeling at the base of his spine and in his gut. His heart was quickening, growing in tempo along with his breathing. Perturbed, Korlandril sat back in his high-backed chair and concentrated, seeking the source of his discomfort.
...
Like a circuit being completed, the image touched off a chain reaction in Korlandril’s mind and body. He flushed with a surge of energy even as he felt a tingling behind his eyes as his nerves sought to connect with something that was not there.
He realised that he was seeking his armour.
Page 153
More means of Eldar sending messages. They can imbue thoughts/emotions into wraithbone objects.Inside was a rune, shaped from silvery-grey wish-stone. He recognised it immediately, the symbol of the Dire Avengers. It was the martial discipline of this warrior Aspect that had merged with the tender thoughts of Thirianna. Holding it in his palm, Korlandril concentrated, teasing the thought-stream with which the rune had been imbued.
...
Korlandril divined the message. Thirianna herself had once heard her call of Khaine and supported him on his current path.
Page 154-155
Basically it seems to bring out the war-mask/Warrior aspects. Like with Seers/Farseers and runes, the runes act as some sort of conduit/circuit breaker for Eldar power, and blood (being special to Khaine/Khorne) is also a conduit to the Path of War.The exarch took the knife and made a cut in the palm of Korlandril’s right hand, allowing the lifeblood of the warrior to drip into the bowl and mingle with that of the other Striking Scorpions.
Kenainath then moved around the squad, in turn painting the rune of the Striking Scorpion upon their foreheads. Korlandril was the last and watched with some trepidation as he saw his companions’ eyes glaze over, their muscles twitch and their
lips curl back from their teeth in snarls
Page 156
Once more the psychic connection/adapatation of armor to warrior.The armour made a creaking noise as it adjusted further. As it knitted together he felt it bonding to him, infusing his spirit with its own. He heard panting, dimly realising that it was he that was breathing so quickly. He closed his eyes and saw the fire-eyed apparition of his anger swirling around him, encasing him as surely as the armoured suit.
Page 157
Waystone. It seems to be an emotional/spiritual talisman as well as a psychic one.Then his waystone, sliding into place upon his chest, guarding his spirit against damnation. It was his last armour, his true protection against the thing he was becoming, the creature he wanted to become.