My dearest and most faithful student Twilight Sparkle,
I am writing you this letter to answer any questions you may have about Hell, my old spellbook or anything related to these matters. Hell itself was and always will be a place where evil creatures are contained to avoid causing harm in Equestira or any other kingdom. You may have met one or more friendlier ones but they are indoubtly evil and thus, must be kept from entering this plane of Existance.
As for Cylyen, the very demon you released, there's... something I never told anyone about, not even Luna. She used to be called Crystal Diva and was one of bravest and most talented unicorns I have ever known. In the desperate times of Discord, I needed to have a backup plan in case the Elements of Harmony didn't work. Diva volunteered for this backup plan and went through drastic changes to become what you've seen in your dream. However, there was one thing we didn't think would be affected - her mind. I had no idea she would turn into a pyromaniac. Nevertheless, I kept her contained in the book, hoping to use her dark magic againts the powers of chaos.
I lost track of what became of the book after the Elements of Harmony trapped discord and assumed it to be destroyed. Someone must have buried it and that's how it ended up in the trunk. Since Ultima cannot be destroyed, the tree could only grow around it and thus, the trunk became hollow. Since not even I, it's author, can destroy it, I'll have to at least guard it so that it won't get into the wrong hands.
I think this letter covers I wanted to tell you but in case you want to know more, just make Spike sent a reply.
Princess Celestia.
P.S : There is a very small chance for Crystal Diva's return.
3662173 Wanted it to have an open ending so that I could have the option of writing a sequel.
Hello, Random Gamer! I’m here on behalf of WRITE, as per a request to review this story. Let’s get to it, shall we?
To begin, there is very little in the way of exposition. The story begins almost immediately with Twilight having found a spellbook conveniently hidden in the trunk of the library, after an unexplained mishap involving Spike. It leaves everything to the imagination and gives the reader nothing to draw upon, or for that matter, a reason to keep reading. In fact, the entire narrative has little to offer the reader.
The above is an example of what is called “Talking Head Syndrome,” wherein speakers of dialogue are either poorly attributed or otherwise given no actions outside the words they speak. The problem with this is that the reader can’t infer any information about what is happening or how a certain character feels about a situation. All we know is what they say, and oftentimes in this fic that is only expounded by the odd dialogue choices the characters make.
How exactly does Spike like Twilight here? This comes from the beginning of the story and has little to go off of other than the normal brother/sister relationship they have in the show.
There are numerous grammatical errors throughout the story that hinder readability. From missing capitalization to punctuation, simple slip-ups mess with what should be easy to read. I’ll say it improves as the chapters progress, but there’s no reason it can’t be better than it is. This website can help you immensely, as well as getting an editor for your work.
But with those things out of the way, let’s talk about the elephant in the room, the story itself. The premise is a tired one: Twilight causes problems with her magic. The idea of elementals and the like is a fresh twist—one I could see myself reading and thoroughly enjoying—but the presentation of the narrative is the biggest downfall of this story. It is mostly a reflection of the above-mentioned lack of description. There really isn’t any whatsoever. And what little there is simply tells the reader what is happening:
The entire story is filled with this. The story needs to give information through actions, not telling the reader how a character feels or what happens; show what happens through descriptions and let the reader decide if its scary, funny, amazing, happy, sad, or any other adjective you can think of.
In addition, the lack of narrative causes problems with pacing, as the entire story happens far too quickly (see your introduction paragraph). You need more information about what is going on throughout. Give some detail to how Twilight might have crept up to Spike while he was asleep after her dream, for example. The actions, especially in the final chapters, need more to immerse the reader in your story.
And finally, what exactly does the ending of chapter one have to do with anything? Referencing the “Move Like Jagger” song does nothing for the story, and, in fact, hurts any chance for accumulating a reader base. A story should never break immersion by drawing the reader’s attention to something outside the story. That is why memes are often frowned upon when referenced in stories.
As it stands, this story needs a lot of work. The biggest factor to focus on, if nothing else, would be adding descriptions to what is happening in the story. From there, everything else is simply practice. I hope this review was helpful and that you seek to improve your works both now and in the future.
P.S. As the advice above is very all-encompassing and changes to their affect will be rather large, I'd be happy to look at this again outside of WRITE after a thorough rewrite if you choose to do one.
Corejo, WRITE's Arms Warrior