Benman 649 followers · 13 stories

Benman belongs to a class of bipedal ape notable for its use of tools and clothing, highly adept at symbolic communication such as language and art.

News Archive

  • 25 weeks
    The Day of the Dead Anthology

    The Day of the Dead (Dia de los Muertos) is a now-famous tradition from ancient times that has been a huge part of Mexican Culture through the centuries. Like so many things in Mexico, it's influenced strongly by certain aspects of the Aztec people.

    It has shaped the way those of us with that heritage look at life and death in many ways, and most importantly on the remembrance of, and honoring the deceased. We traditionally decorate little altars dedicated to the memories of those that passed away… but it's not a somber occasion.

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    22 comments · 4,620 views
  • 25 weeks
    Jinglemas 2023!

    Jinglemas is the annual tradition on Fimfiction to exchange stories around the holidays with users on the site. This single event allows all Fimfiction users to come together and celebrate the reason for the season. Ponies!

    Enroll in this Secret-Santa-style gift exchange to request a holiday themed story, to be written secretly by another participant during the month of December. And in turn, you will be tasked with writing someone else's request. Then all the stories will be exchanged at Christmas! Simplicity itself! Thanks to the hard work of the Breezies, everyone will be ensured to get their gift!

    You only have until November 24th to Sign up!

    Read More

    30 comments · 5,793 views
  • 49 weeks
    PSA: Using AIs to Write and Publish Stories in Fimfiction

    Hello everyone, this is a PSA (Public Service Announcement, for those of ESL) to put to rest consistent questions about using AI to 'write' stories and publish them here. This is not intended as a poll or a request for feedback. It is exclusively a clarification on an already-existing rule.

    People ask: "Can I, oh great and powerful D, post a story or chapter that I got ChatGPT to write for me?!"

    And the answer, my friend, is... No.

    Absolutely not. Not in a thousand years!

    Because you didn't write it.

    It is not your creation. You are NOT the author. In fact, you are the opposite.

    There seems to be some confusion when interpreting the following rule:

    Don’t Post (Content)

    [...]

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    698 comments · 23,840 views
  • 77 weeks
    Jinglemas 2022!

    Jinglemas is the annual tradition on Fimfiction to exchange stories around the holidays with users on the site. This single event allows all Fimfiction users to come together and celebrate the reason for the season. Ponies!

    Enroll in this Secret-Santa-style gift exchange to request a holiday themed story, to be written secretly by another participant during the month of December. And in turn, you will be tasked with writing someone else's request. Then all the stories will be exchanged at Christmas! Simplicity itself! Thanks to the hard work of the Breezies, everyone will be ensured to get their gift!

    Read More

    62 comments · 12,445 views
  • 104 weeks
    Phishing Awareness

    Have you ever found yourself in a situation like this?



    And then you magically find yourself in a suspiciously familiar site, except that you're not logged in, and it requires you to do so?

    Well. Don't log in. This is a scam, and a cheap one at that. 

    There've been recent attempts to obtain Fimfiction users’ personal data, like passwords and/or emails through links like the one I'm making fun of above. And a distressing amount of people don't seem to know what phishing attempts are.

    If you HAVE entered a site like this and put in your data, make sure to follow these basic steps at least.

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    167 comments · 15,419 views
  • 116 weeks
    All Our Best [Royal Canterlot Library]

    As should be obvious from 15 months without a feature, life has taken the Royal Canterlot Library curators in different directions. While there’s still plenty of awesome stories being written in the My Little Pony fandom, we’re no longer actively working to spotlight them, and it’s time to officially draw the project to a close.

    Thank you for all of your support, suggestions, and comments over the years. We’re grateful to have been able to share seven years of exemplary stories with you, and give more insight into the minds behind them. In the spirit of the project, please keep reading and recommending fantastic fics to friends—the community is enriched when we all share what we love.

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    115 comments · 18,243 views
  • 120 weeks
    Jinglemas 2021 has come to a close!

    Jinglemas had 114 stories written and exchanged this year!
    You can read them all here, in the Jinglemas 2021 folder!

    Jhoira wrote The Hearths Warming Eve Guest for EngageBook
    GaPJaxie wrote Twilight and Spike Hide a Body for Telly Vision
    SnowOriole wrote The Armor Hypothesis for BaeroRemedy
    snappleu wrote Words Said So Often That They Lack Any Meaning for Trick Question
    NeirdaE wrote Starlight and Trixie Direct a Play for Moosetasm
    Ninjadeadbeard wrote Garland Graveyard Shift for NeirdaE
    Roundabout Recluse wrote Apples to Apples for Ninjadeadbeard
    MistyShadowz wrote The Times We Shared for NaiadSagaIotaOar
    Petrichord wrote A Gentle Nudge for Angel Midnight
    Jade Ring wrote Past, Future, and Present for Frazzle2Dazzle
    Jake The Army Guy wrote The Big Talk for Dreadnought
    The Red Parade wrote Heart Strings for Franso
    Greatazuredragon wrote A Hearth’s Warming Question for GaPJaxie

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    20 comments · 9,893 views
  • 151 weeks
    Reunions: A Swapped Roles Contest!

    Okay guys here's something fun presented by Nitro Indigo.

    Presented by me, I guess, but I digress.

    Last year, I (Nitro Indigo) noticed that there was a surprising lack of roleswap fanfics on this site. To fix that, I decided to run a roleswap contest over the summer themed around secrets. While it didn’t get many entries, it nevertheless attracted the attention of some big authors and was the origin of two of my favourite fics. Overall, I think it was a success, so I’ve decided to run another one!

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    57 comments · 16,402 views
  • 224 weeks
    Minor Rules and Reporting Update

    Hope everyone is enjoying the new year.

    Some small changes have been made to our rules as well as to the reporting process.

    Rules

    "No attacks directed at individuals or groups due to race, gender, gender identity, religion or sexual identity."

    This better clarifies our previously ill-defined hate speech rule and includes groups as well as individual attacks.

    "No celebration, glorification or encouragement of real life criminal activity."

    This includes past, present and potential future crimes.

    Read More

    747 comments · 15,912 views
  • 226 weeks
    Jinglemas 2019

    There's truly no time like the holidays. What's better than copious amounts of food, quality time with family and friends, hearing the sweet sound of Trans-Siberian Orchestra on repeat, and unmanagble financial stress from our capitalist overlords?

    Gift exchanges of course!


    Our Own Little Way of bringing Hearth's Warming to Fimfiction

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    28 comments · 8,392 views
May
3rd
2014

Site Post » [Interview] RazedRainbow’s “And A Dark Wind Blows” · 4:23am May 3rd, 2014

Today’s story offers a glimpse at a lonely, desperate struggle in a world where every breath is an act of defiance against the darkness closing in.

And A Dark Wind Blows
[Dark] • 13,093 words

Was it a magical spell gone awry? An angry god laying waste upon a world that had forgotten him? A long and bloody war? An incurable disease?

Fluttershy couldn’t remember what it was that had turned the world to this. All she knew was that she had to survive.

FROM THE CURATORS: How does a 13,000-word story keep readers engaged with no dialogue and almost no character interaction?  “Great post-apocalyptic landscape and a rich narrative voice,” Present Perfect said.  Bradel appreciated the marvelous pacing and fine control of tension: “The single thing I think this piece did best is in varying the mood like it did.” And Horizon appreciated the “haunting beauty” of it: “The world around Fluttershy may be bleak and dead, but it’s a memorable and integral part of the story."

However, this journey through a wasteland is very pony at its heart.  “Fluttershy feels very much like Fluttershy, despite the setting, and the connection to her (departed) friends felt real,” Chris said.  And it even won over some initial doubters: “I was going to write about how this story has its flaws, and how it didn’t have much to do with ponies … until the third act happened and totally invalidated my critique,” Benman said. “The ending completely and utterly works.”

Read on for our author interview, in which RazedRainbow discusses safety, tension, the unknown, and Fluttershy as a huntress.


Give us the standard biography.

To say that my life is an interesting one would be stretching the truth to its snapping point. I’m 21, grew up in a normal house with a normal family and normal friends in a normal South Carolina town. At one point I was a normal college student too, but then financial issues reared their ugly head, forcing me to go on hiatus and take up a most prestigious occupation: bus driver. It’s not the highest paying job, nor the funnest, but hey, a job’s a job.

Outside of work, I’m a man of many hobbies, including (but not limited to): hiking, rock climbing, and mediocre guitar playing.

How did you come up with your handle/penname?

In short, I was trying to be cute. My first attempt at fanfic was a (very weak) attempt at a “character study,” focusing on some of the characters’ in MLP: FiM in the wake of Rainbow Dash’s death. Since that story was originally meant to be the fic I would forever be associated with, and was about “razing” Rainbow, I figured calling myself RazedRainbow would seem appropriate. Said fic withered and died; the name stuck.

Who’s your favorite pony?

Rarity.

What’s your favorite episode?

The Best Night Ever.  I’m more of a fan of the ensemble episodes than the character-focused ones, and this episode shows why. Each one of the mane six has a moment in the limelight, and the hijinks that ensue when the night slowly crumbles around them are equal parts entertaining and believable. There’s not a single dull second. Factor in a couple of great songs and a satisfying resolution, and you’ve got a great episode.

What do you get from the show?

A half-hour of solid entertainment. For me, so long as the characters stay cute and fun, the animation stays great, the music remains catchy, and the episodes keep being entertaining, you won’t see me stomping my foot, ranting to high heaven about how the show is “ruined forever.” It’s a simple show that hits all the notes I want it to, and that is enough.

What do you want from life?

I want to be able to say it was a life well-lived in the end. Specifically, there’s nothing I want more than to say I had a positive, lasting effect on (at the very least) one person by the time the lights go out.

Why do you write?

I’ve always been a storyteller at heart. I wish I could put a finger on what exactly caused the storytelling bug to take hold of me; all I know is that it’s latched on tight, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. Nothing brings me joy quite like weaving a tale.

What advice do you have for the authors out there?

For starters, I’ll dump the usual advice on you: read a lot, always strive to improve your story, and practice, practice, practice. There’s a reason you see this advice littered all over the place: it works. Yes, having an editor tear your fic to kingdom come is hard to watch, but once you put the pieces back together, you’re left with something far more beautiful than it was before.

Now, for some informal advice.

- Read everything you write aloud. This will not only help you notice technical errors you and your editor may have failed to notice, but it also helps the flow of your story. Certain phrasing may look fine on paper, but stumble about when read aloud.

- Outlines are a beautiful thing, especially when you are writing a story that stretches into double-digit chapter numbers. Know where your story is going, know what the climax is, know what the final scene will be, and know all this before you write the opening line. A story that wanders in circles is not one that will hook many people.

- Don’t be afraid to take risks.

- Trust your audience. Not everything has to be spelled out. Let your audience figure stuff out on their own.

“And a Dark Wind Blows” owes a lot to horror fiction, stylistically. Are there any particular influences you drew on when building this story?

The influences present here are drawn less from specific stories, and more from the genre as a whole.

I’m a big believer in the “Nothing is Scarier” trope. Sure, a grotesque monster can be scary, but to me, what really makes a moment tense and frightening is the threat. Jump scares may make someone scream, but tension is what truly stays with them, what makes them sleep with the lights on that night, and that was the key piece of horror fiction I was drawing from here.

One of the most striking elements of this story is its juxtaposition of safe spaces and dangerous spaces. What made you decide to use this motif?

It was all a question of atmosphere, really. The world presented in this is a very dangerous world, and the best way to have that come across is… well, make no place every feel truly safe. Sure, Fluttershy has her “safe” spaces in this story, as well as the “unsafe” ones, but the world is one that is so ruined that those two types of spaces tend to bleed together. What few bits of life are presented in this are surrounded on all sides by this wasteland, and the wasteland’s starting to infect. Even in the clearing outside her cave—her ‘safe’ house, if you will—Fluttershy feels like His eyes are watching her. Every step Fluttershy takes needs to be felt, and each paragraph needs to feel like it’ll be the last one to include a living, breathing, poetically waxing Fluttershy. The more a reader thinks that He is going to lunge out of the bushes at the next step, the better. The apocalypse is not a fun or safe place to be.

You’ve said that you originally intended for this story to be about Fluttershy hunting some sort of creature. Can you comment on how it became the story that it is, instead?

It started out being a story about Fluttershy hunting a creature simply because of the irony involved. Though that idea did not last long at all, parts of it stayed with me for Dark Wind, the main one being that Fluttershy is a lot stronger than she appears to be on the surface. Sure,  Rainbow Dash can break the sound barrier with a flap of her wing and Twilight can cast spells that turn frogs into oranges,  but when it comes to survival, I’m putting my money on Fluttershy, making her the perfect protagonist for a story such as this.

Other parts carried over as well—the theme of loneliness and survival, creating a large-yet-empty atmosphere, the prominent use of internal monologue—but in the end, this story and the idea that spurred it are completely different stories.

You’ve mentioned that you had a particular apocalyptic event in mind, in the backdrop for this story. Would you care to comment further on it?

Well, I won’t give away the exact cause because I might come back to this later, but this aspect of the story does tie in with one of my bits of advice: “trust your audience.” Though I did have a specific event in mind, I decided to sprinkle in hints at various types of causes. There are signs of a military conflict sprinkled around, yes, but there are also things that point to a much higher reasoning (the sun and moon are noticeably absent). I wanted the audience to come up with their own reasons for the apocalypse. Spelling stuff out can be nice at times, but giving readers something to think deeply about is far more satisfying. There is strength in the unknown.

What’s the one thing you’d like readers to take away from reading “And a Dark Wind Blows”?

Odd as it sounds, I want readers to come out of this with a sense of hope. The world in this story may be dark and full of terrors, but it’s still Fluttershy’s story, and her tale is one of finding light in the darkness.

Is there anything else you’d like to add?

Despite my inactivity, I am far from dead.

(You can check out And A Dark Wind Blows here. You can follow the Royal Canterlot Library's interviews at our site, or join the fimfiction group to get notified of new selections and suggest your own favorites.)

Report Benman · 1,857 views ·
Comments ( 10 )

How would somepony go about being interviewed?

Like, what criteria do you look for? Because there's a story I'm going to be posting soon that's in the same vein as this one, and I might want to be interviewed about it. i mean, I have been working on it for a long time. :twilightsheepish:

2074182 The Royal Canterlot Library has to select your story. They have five people that pick out stories they think have merit and then they get together and review them. If a majority votes to put it into the Library, then it gets inducted with an interview.

So basically, just write a really, really good story and wait.

2074230

Do I have to wait for my story to get picked up by the story pickers, or could I politely suggest them to check out my story? :twilightblush:

I don't mean that in a bad way, it's just I have terribly luck with kinds of things like being "randomly picked". My never winning a single raffle, lottery, or community drawing can attest to that. :rainbowwild:

2074242 Well, I suppose you could PM them. They are nice guys, but it would set a bad precedence for them to start following up on any story someone PMed them about.

If I were you, this would be my path:

1) Write a truly excellent story.
2) Get several respected editors to go over it, really fine tuning it.
3) Try and get featured here.
4) Try and get it onto EQD and/or The Royal Guard. That would get your story maximum visibility, and the people at The Royal Canterlot Library are more likely to see it.

Only after I'd done all of that would I maybe PM someone and see if they had any interest. Well, I wouldn't, but if I was going to, I'd have done that first.

The Library is looking for stories that do something above and beyond, and if your story fits that criteria, steps three and four shouldn't really be too difficult. If you are struggling there, then PMing the members of the Library probably isn't appropriate.

2074276

Well I was already planning on submitting it to EQD, in fact that's been my biggest goal for my story since it's inception in 2011: To be on EQD.

I'm also planning on gathering a bunch of pre-readers and editors to give me feedback so I can do a big sweeping edit, fine-tuning things and putting the last bit of filling over the plot holes I've been filling, and then submit the first part (or act, however you want to call it) to EQD and FimFiction.

the only problem I have is I get discrouraged easily, moreso when it comes to things like random selection or the prospect of getting my story featured.

I mean, I know my story is great, I know it's feature-able material, but I also know I only have one shot to make a good impression when it gets posted, and that makes me nervous.

Maybe I'm just overthinking things. That tends to be my best quality. :applejackunsure:

2074299 That's why I suggest getting it onto EQD. You can write up your story in something like GDocs and submit it to EQD. If they approve it, you can ask them to hold off on posting it there until you publish it here on FIMFiction.net. I've never done that, but I know some authors do. That way you can have it here on the front page as a new story and have the views coming in from EQD. If the timing is right, it has a good chance of hitting the box.

But I've had several stories that I've published with less than a hundred views and maybe twenty upvotes that did get to the feature box once they went to EQD. That initial publishing period isn't the final time. You can hit the box whenever if the views/votes/comments are coming in. Only once, though. Once it's been in the box, it won't go back in, except for story updates.

2074316

>That way you can have it here on the front page as a new story and have the views coming in from EQD.

Holy Celestia, I never thought of that. That's brilliant! :pinkiegasp:

And like I said, I'm probably just overthinking and discouraging myself. I've been working on this story for so long, I just want to tell everypony about it and have everypony like it, but the fear of it being rejected or just flying under the radar is a very discouraging thought, even more so when it's something you've been pouring every ounce of your soul into.

But I'm hoping for the best. I really want to be interviewed like RazedRainbow here, so I guess I have no choice but to stop focusing on the negative :scootangel:

This story was a delight to edit and engrossing to read. Razed was somehow able to keep Fluttershy in character despite the drastic change in setting, which is an admirable feat. The world is morbidly beautiful, and showing to the reader through Fluttershy's experiences rather than outright exposition really helps to immerse a reader. This story needs more love.

Still patiently waiting with the hopes of a sequel.

2074242
We do have a story recommendation thread that we keep an eye on, but we ask that you nominate other authors' stories rather than your own, because it keeps the quality of the recommendations a lot higher if people are coming in with unsolicited praise.

2074276 is great advice. We feature stories whether or not they've been EqD'd, Guarded, Angeled, featureboxed, etc., but because we're all looking for the same quality writing, there's a decent amount of overlap; and we do enjoy reading stories (broadly speaking) that come pre-recommended like that.

Reading through past interview archives (both here and in our predecessor the Pony Fiction Vault) is good, too, because all of the featured authors have great writing advice to pass along!

Best,

H

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