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The Saint of Bright Doors
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
15 posts | 7 read | 12 to read
The Saint of Bright Doors sets divine assassins against transcendent cults, devils and anti-gods against militias and mundane disappointments, resulting in a novel that is revelatory and resonant. Nestled at the head of a supercontinent, framed by sky and sea, lies Luriat, the city of bright doors. The doors are everywhere in the city, squatting in walls where they don't belong, painted in vivid warning. They watch over a city of art and avarice, of plagues and pogroms, and silently refuse to open. No one knows what lies beyond them, but everyone has their own theory and their own relationship to the doors. Researchers perform tests and take samples, while supplicants offer fruit and flowers and hold prayer circles. Many fear the doors as the source of hauntings from unspeakable realms. To a rare unchosen few, though, the doors are both a calling and a bane. Fetter is one of those few. When Fetter was born, his mother tore his shadow from him. She raised him as a weapon to kill his sainted father and destroy the religion rising up in his sacred footsteps. Now Fetter is unchosen, lapsed in his devotion to both his parents. He casts no shadow, is untethered by gravity, and sees devils and antigods everywhere he goes. With no path to follow, Fetter would like to be anything but himself. Does his answer wait on the other side of one of Luriat's bright doors?
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review
Robotswithpersonality
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Panpan

Well, shucks. So many promising angles to the premise, the world-building, the messaging, but - I hesitate to call it messy - it just feels like it kept cutting itself off. One plot line would be interrupted by another, in theory a new development, the same characters, but it often felt like the characters were privy to more than the reader was, and not in a way that was purposefully mysterious, and later revealed. 1/?

Robotswithpersonality 2/? I mostly appreciated the push to build a narrative at the expense of diving deeper into the mythos of this world, but it did leave me with questions. I guess my subjective complaint is that the aspects to the story that most interested me were not built out in a way I enjoyed, and more was introduced than could be done justice to. 🤷🏼‍♂️ 2mo
Robotswithpersonality 3/3 I think it\'s clear that there are intentions towards social commentary: pogroms, camps, caste system, \'race science\', cultish religious organizations, but it all tends to blur together when most of the book is one form of hell or another. Fetter is distanced from the world due to his upbringing and as the majority of the story is from his POV, I also had trouble engaging as well. 2mo
11 likes3 comments
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Robotswithpersonality
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Points for provoking a WTF upon encountering the unfamiliar phrasing.
Evidently hadal is primarily used in reference to the hadal zone of the ocean, “The region extending from 6,000 to 11,000 meters is called the hadal, or hadalpelagic, zone after Hades, the Greek god of the underworld.“ Which tracks with “so far under the surface that no light penetrates.“
So an extra sinister way to say 'a tone of deep regret'?!
Upon reflection, I LIKE. 😈

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xicanti
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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I‘m only 25 pages into THE SAINT OF BRIGHT DOORS, but it feels like it‘s gonna be special. Charlie agrees.

dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 2mo
42 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Robotswithpersonality
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Grand simile.

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Robotswithpersonality
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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New (to me) word alert!
Horripilate: “undergo horripilation, in which the hairs stand erect from the body due to cold, fear, or excitement.“

Serotonin Thanks to the arrector pili muscle 👍 Fun bio fact of the day 😬 2mo
Robotswithpersonality @Serotonin That's another thing I didn't know! Nifty! 2mo
8 likes1 stack add2 comments
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xicanti
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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This week‘s library haul is mostly stuff I‘ve had on suspended hold for a loooooong time, plus a 1987 Jeannette Winterson novel I requested when my original 1987 pick proved, shall we say, less than engaging.

I think I‘m most eager for the tagged book, since I hadn‘t even heard of it until it was nominated for the Hugo. I like going into things with no real expectations.

review
sakeriver
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
Pickpick

I'm not entirely sure how to describe this one. It struck me as somewhat Borgesian in how its world is constructed, but also there are sections that read like contemporary litfic? Like, it is epic fantasy and also... not? Interesting, though. And novel, at least for me. Never read anything quite like it.

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julesG
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Pickpick

@Leniverse - it was weird. And a bit epic. And meandering. And I'm not sure I understood it all.

Low pick.

Leniverse That kinda sounds like my kind of book 😂 Not sure about the meandering part though. 4mo
julesG @Leniverse more tangents than meandering. It could be a good fit for you. 4mo
Leniverse Sounds good. Glad this is one of the ones available at the library. 4mo
julesG @Leniverse 👏👏 if I had to compare it to any other weird book I've read than the tagged. But Saint is fantasy, Skyward Inn is more Sci-Fi 4mo
Soubhiville I picked this up recently… I‘ll probably be reading it in August. 4mo
60 likes2 stack adds5 comments
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sakeriver
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Next

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deirdrebeecher
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Mehso-so

I wanted to love this book. There are moments from it that are seared into my brain in the best possible way. The quality of the writing is excellent and the world is unique. A deeply political allegory set in a parallel reality with mobile phones and magic side by side. Fans of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, NK Jemisin and China Mieville should give it a go.

Ultimately I just couldn't connect with the MC. For those who do, likely it will be a 5*

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HeyT
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Pickpick

This was very interesting as the satirical elements deal with a culture I'm not really familiar with but I enjoyed the ride anyways. I read a review that said this is a retelling of a story from the Buddhist tradition but again I'm not that familiar enough to verify that.

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HeyT
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Making good progress on my current read while doing a little porch reading. Rolo just wants to sunbathe while performing his reading buddy duties.
#DogsOfLitsy

dabbe 🩶🖤🩶 9mo
13 likes1 comment
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HeyT
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Porch reading with the pup.
#DogsOfLitsy

dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 10mo
13 likes1 comment
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HeyT
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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Starting this tonight even though I can‘t remember where I heard about this and why decided to place a library hold on it.

Soubhiville I hope you enjoy it! I‘ve had my eye on this one, I‘ll be Interested in your review. 10mo
18 likes1 comment
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Read-y_Picker
The Saint of Bright Doors | Vajra Chandrasekera
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This story was so masterfully written it's hard to believe that it's the author's first novel. I hardly have anything to compare it to. Chandrasekera created an entire world rich in cultural lore, politics, religious ideologies and all in under 400 pages. The writing style is immersive, bright, rich, textured. It was like getting swallowed into another world and just leaving everything else behind. Read this if you enjoy Bardugo, Jemisin, Schwab.

Read-y_Picker Coming July 2023! #ARC 5🌟
Can't wait to see if this takes off on Litsy...
1y
27 likes1 comment