As both guidebook and history lesson, The Jedi Path offers insight into what it means to be a Jedi Knight and hints at the philosophies, structures, and mantras of the Jedi way that allowed for their great longevity but that also prevented them from seeing their eventual destruction. The book is a sleek, in-world manual for Jedi of all ages covering the basic tenets, factions, duties, training, history, and lore of the Jedi Order. Published shortly after the Battle of Ruusan and the supposed destruction of the Sith, the book passed through several hands over the years and bears annotations in the margins from its various owners, including Yoda, Thame Cerulian, Count Dooku, Qui-Gon Jinn, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Anakin Sywalker, Ahsoka Tano, Darth Sidious/Emperor Palpatine, and Luke Skywalker, the book's current "owner." As with the other texts in this series, the annotations provided great fun and had lots of cheeky references to the larger stories of their respective characters. The manual is slim but comprehensive, covering everything from recruitment to the Jedi Trials to the Temple on Coruscant to the Archives, the High Council, and the prophecy of the Chosen One (completely redacted--Luke speculates by Sidious). A lot of the material is known to megafans, but it's fun to see how it's presented as a teaching tool to up-and-coming Jedi. It's a great contrast to the The Book of Sith not only in content but in physicality as well, which is a clever representation of these two warring sides of the Force. It will be interesting to see what pillars Luke still holds too when instructing Rey in the new film.