And as I told Madness, my interpretation is that Unerring Grace is the same thing as the White Luck. Did anyone else think that, or am I on crack?
I don't know, it's really not clear at all. It would seem that both are basically the same, but I think that there probably is some kind of difference, because the White-Luck shows the Narindar exactly what is, at all times. Kel never sees anything like that...
Trick question, I think the way Kelmomas uses the terms have no distinction.
However, I think Yatwer's White-Luck, and Ajokli's Unerring Grace, differ, if only that they are similar phenomenon owned by different gods.
H, when you have a digital release you can go back and check for me but I feel like, especially in TGO, the Warrior's POV is highly variable in the particulars of what is going to happen but specific as to the generalities (like these people will die). In one POV - and I'll have to check later - I believe the Warrior sees himself stabbing Theli but then he just stands there while she's crushed...
I remain resolute that Ajokli's Narindar have an agency which exceeds the capacities of the faux-Narindar of other Gods.
Kelmomas dreams that he is stabbed in the eye by WLW through the grate, and its framed in a way that implies that it agrees with the WLW's visions that same night.
I haven't looked at WLW's perspectives and actual chain of events, curious if they differ.
And, I'd have to agree with Madness regarding Ajokli Narindar > All others.
One major point supporting this is that Ajokli is allegedly the only God that can see the No-God and the Consult machinations. The Ajokli chosen souls, his assassins, his Narindar, would have fewer blind spots than any other God.
As for how Kelmomas fits into that piece of the puzzle, I'm not really sure.
He really
seems to have a connection with Ajokl - what with the whole whelming scene and it being brought up by the-voice-that-is-sammi. But there is nothing so direct as Sorweel's interactions with Yatwer-manifest.
Something caused Kelmomas to surprise the WLW. He fell within Yatwer's blindspot, if only for just that one moment. Why? There is a bit at the end of that scene where it says something to the effect of 'a boy not quite human'. Reminds me of the God's not seeing the Consult's weapons.
I said it somewhere before, but it bears repeating: The WLWs vision cannot are infallible if the god giving him those visions cannot see the world as it is. If the NG was standing in front of Kellhus when he swung his sword, he'd hit a big sarcophagus.
Now, that doesn't necessarily mean that the conclusion of his visions are incorrect. The outcome can still occur by some other path... Or they could be totally false because the path is flawed.