I can still picture the first scene where a walen appears—not as a monster but as loss given a body—and that framing shifts everything about their origin for me. The novels present two threads: engineered walens, born of deliberate alchemy and coven rites, and emergent walens, born from natural ley surges. Those engineered by
exiles were meant to be stabilizers, living anchors for cities collapsing into the void, which explains why many city-legends treat walens as both tool and
scapegoat.
Digging into the lore the books plant, the engineered origin involves the Echoing Rites and a host of moral compromises—transferring
Fragments of unwilling minds into new vessels. That raises questions about consent and soul-ownership that the later volumes explore through court cases, clandestine freed walen movements, and archival chapters in 'The Chronicles of Eirath'. Emergent walens, on the other hand, are described almost poetically: a fisherman’s grief, pooled near a cliff where a leystorm hits the sea, condenses into a creature that carries the fisherman’s
last song. Over time the novels juxtapose these two births to ask whether origin determines
identity. I like that ambiguity; the series refuses tidy answers and instead layers cultural responses, religious doctrine, and personal testimony to build a full picture. It’s a messy, humane myth that reads like folklore rewritten for a wounded world, and I keep coming back for the ethical knots it ties.