The City That Wove Its Own Shadow
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Narrateur(s):
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Tegan Johnson
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Auteur(s):
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Phaedra Quanette Holloway
À propos de cet audio
The City That Wove Its Own Shadow – A luminous tale of faith, memory, and the language that keeps a city alive.
High above the Haloth Desert floats Aerashar, a city sustained not by machines but by belief. Every whispered prayer, every confession, every lullaby for the dead becomes the breath that holds it aloft. Its streets hum with hymnstone and light, its people trade in words as though each syllable were an act of survival.
When the first cracks appear beneath its golden avenues, Sefra, a young archivist with ink-scars on her wrists, is tasked to record every remaining prayer. But faith is thinning, truth has grown heavy, and forgotten Aspects—ancient forces like Silence, Return, and Mirage—are stirring beneath the dunes. As Aerashar trembles between belief and gravity, Sefra must decide what a city built on words must learn to say to save itself.
Through rituals of confession and the weaving of a magical Listening Loom, Aerashar learns to listen to its own heart. Machines and prayers compete to hold it aloft; scholars argue with engineers; the air itself becomes a conversation between staying and letting go. And when Sefra discovers the nameless door where the city’s first word waits to be rewritten, she faces the oldest question of all: can truth and mercy share the same breath?
By the time Aerashar learns to breathe like a tide—rising and lowering with human honesty—its people will have learned that salvation is not flight but rhythm, not perfection but the courage to begin again.
The City That Wove Its Own Shadow is a sweeping, poetic fantasy about language as architecture, belief as gravity, and confession as the quietest form of courage. Fans of Le Guin, Patricia A. McKillip, and Erin Morgenstern will find themselves at home in its luminous deserts and living streets, where even silence has a name and every word is a kind of prayer.
©2025 Phaedra Quanette Holloway (P)2025 Phaedra Quanette Holloway