News Archive

  • 185 weeks
    MSPiper’s “Autumnfall Change” [Royal Canterlot Library]

    You might want to keep a whiteboard handy for today’s story.


    Autumnfall Change
    [Sci-Fi][Slice of Life][Human] • 8,419 words

    Magic and technology may have pierced the void and blazed a path between the realms, but that was the simple part. Adjusting to the changes that follow can be far more daunting.

    Yet despite the complexities involved even in basic communication, Serendipity has found friends to talk to among humankind who can cheer her up when she’s down. And occasionally inspire her to bursts of ingenuity unhindered by such trifles as foresight.

    Read More

    6 comments · 9,205 views
  • 200 weeks
    TCC56's "Glow In The Dark, Shine In The Sun" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    A villain might just have a bright future in today's story.


    Glow In The Dark, Shine In The Sun
    [Equestria Girls] [Drama] [Slice of Life] • 27,035 words

    Despite all attempts, Cozy Glow still hasn't been shown a path to friendship. No pony has been able to get through to her, and she's only gotten worse with each attempt.

    Reluctant to return the filly to stone again, Princess Twilight has one last option. One pony she hasn't tried. Or in this case? One person.

    Sunset Shimmer.

    Can Sunset do what no pony has been able to?

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    10 comments · 9,389 views
  • 202 weeks
    The Red Parade's "never forever" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story never says never.


    never forever
    [Sad] [Slice of Life] • 1,478 words

    Lightning Dust will never be a Wonderbolt. When she left the Academy, she swore she'd never look back. When the Washouts disbanded, she swore she'd forget about them.

    Yet after all these years, against all odds, she finds herself here. At a Wonderbolts show. Just on the wrong side of the glass.

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    20 comments · 8,197 views
  • 207 weeks
    Freglz's "Nothing Left to Lose" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Don't lose out on today's story.


    Nothing Left to Lose
    [Drama] [Sad] • 6,367 words

    Some things can't be changed.

    Starlight believes otherwise.

    FROM THE CURATORS: One might be forgiven for thinking that after nine years of MLP (and fanfic), there's nothing left to explore on such well-trodden ground as changeling redemption — but there are still stories on the topic which are worthy of turning heads.  "Though the show seems to have moved past it as a possibility, the question of whether and how Queen Chrysalis could be reformed alongside the other changelings still lingers in the fandom's consciousness," Present Perfect said in his nomination. "In comes Freglz, with a solidly reasoned story that combines the finales of seasons 5 and 6 and isn't afraid to let the question hang."

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    26 comments · 7,601 views
  • 209 weeks
    Somber's "Broken Record" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story puts all the pieces together.

    (Ed. note: Some content warnings apply to this interview, regarding current world circumstances and mentions of suicidal ideation.)


    Broken Record
    [Drama] [Slice of Life] • 7,970 words

    There has never been an athlete like Rainbow Dash. The sprints. The marathons. The land speed record. She held them all.

    Until she didn't.

    Until she had only one left... and met the pony that might take it from her...

    Read More

    11 comments · 5,398 views
  • 211 weeks
    jakkid166's "Detective jakkid166 in everything" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Missing out on today's story would be a crime.


    Detective jakkid166 in everything
    [Comedy] [Human] • 15,616 words

    "Every pony thing evre made would be better if it had me in it."
    - me

    I, Detective jakkid166, will be prepared to make every pony fanficion, video, and game better by me being in it. All you favorite pony content, except it has ME! And even I could be in some episodes of the show except cause the charaters are idiot I'm good at my job.

    The ultimate Detective jakkid166 adventures collection, as he goes into EVERYTHING to make it good.

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    171 comments · 9,667 views
  • 213 weeks
    Mannulus' "Sassy Saddles Meets Sasquatch" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story is a rare find.


    Sassy Saddles Meets Sasquatch
    [Comedy] [Random] • 5,886 words

    The legend is known throughout Equestria, but there are few who believe. Those who claim to have seen the beast are dismissed as crackpots and madponies. Those who bring evidence before the world are dismissed as histrionic deceivers. There are those who have seen, however -- those who know -- and they will forever cry out their warning from the back seats of filthy, old train cars, even to those who dismiss them, who revile them, who ignore their warnings unto their own mortal peril.

    "The sasquatch is real!" they will cry forevermore, even as nopony believes.

    But from this day forward, Sassy Saddles will believe.

    Read More

    16 comments · 6,242 views
  • 214 weeks
    SheetGhost’s “Moonlight Vigil” [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Take a closer look into tonight’s story.


    Moonlight Vigil
    [Tragedy] • 3,755 words

    Bitter from her defeat and exile, the Mare in the Moon watches Equestria move on without her.

    Read More

    1 comments · 4,883 views
  • 217 weeks
    Unwhole Hole's "The Murder of Elrod Jameson" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story is some killer noir.

    [Adult story embed hidden]

    The Murder of Elrod Jameson
    [Dark] [Mystery] [Sci-Fi] [Human] • 234,343 words

    [Note: This story contains scenes of blood and gore, sexuality, and a depiction of rape.]

    Elrod Jameson: a resident of SteelPoint Level Six, Bridgeport, Connecticut. A minor, pointless, and irrelevant man... who witnessed something he was not supposed to.

    Narrowly avoiding his own murder, he desperately searches for help. When no living being will help him, he turns to the next best thing: a pony.

    Read More

    14 comments · 5,371 views
  • 219 weeks
    Grimm's "Don't Open the Door" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story lingers like the curling mist in a dark forest.


    Don't Open the Door
    [Dark][Horror] • 13,654 words

    After an expedition into the Everfree Forest ends in disaster, Applejack and Rainbow Dash take refuge in an abandoned cabin until morning.

    This is probably a poor decision, but it's only one night, after all. How bad could it be?

    FROM THE CURATORS: "I don't care much for horror stories," AugieDog mused. "But this one does so much right, I found myself really impressed." Present Perfect thought it was "simply one of the best horror stories I've ever read," and Soge agreed "one-hundred percent" that "this is pitch-perfect horror from beginning to end."

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    8 comments · 4,689 views
Mar
25th
2016

Author Interview » Wellspring's "Arthurian—The Black King" [Royal Canterlot Library] · 12:20pm Mar 25th, 2016

You always go back to the classics — and with today's story, you can return to a pony take on one of the great classics of English literature.


Arthurian—The Black King
[Dark] [Romance] [Tragedy] • 30,305 words

"Those of us who have a general overview and knowledge of King Sombra regard him to be a despotic autocrat, a power-hungry potentate and a vicious oppressor. And, even if this condemnation is justified, we may perhaps not have the right reason for this attribution. This is due to the fact that before King Sombra turned to the tyrant we all know him to be, he was the greatest knight of the Crystal Empire."

—Sir Sombra de Onyx, Foreword to the Third Edition

FROM THE CURATORS: "This is a very ambitious piece," Present Perfect said — as its roots show.  "The author lists Le Morte D'Arthur and Ivanhoe as the primary inspirations," Chris said, "and Wellspring does a commendable job capturing both the literary style and the feeling of history-by-way-of-myth which permeates Le Morte D'Arthur.  A capital-r Romance in the truest sense, this is a story about character archetypes presented in a tell-heavy style."  It is also, in Horizon's words, "metal as heck.  From Sombra's world-serpent origin to the way the sphinx is killed, this continuously finds new ways to crank up the level of epic."

And while The Black King can be an easy story to bounce off of — "I can appreciate what the author's doing here, but I can't read it," AugieDog said — it richly rewards readers willing to engage with it.  "The style is obtuse, and all the grammatical errors don't help the story at all," Soge said, "but this story sold me on its metafiction aspects levels so hard that by the end I went from 'Wellspring needs a editor' to 'Boy, Equestrian grammar sure has changed'. The afterwords are tone perfect, the historical and plot inaccuracies feel legitimate, and the footnotes complement the text beautifully."  Present Perfect had similar praise for those margin elements: "There's so much unexpected humor with the historical inaccuracies in the footnotes. And there's historical poems in them! They do quite a lot more work than one expects footnotes to. ... I've also never praised an afterword before, which should say enough by itself."

What locked in The Black King's feature, though, was that its unusual style was wrapped around solid storytelling.  "Sombra's backstory is really powerful," Present Perfect said, while Soge praised its worldbuilding more broadly: "The story carries some fascinating ideas about Sombra, the Crystal Kingdom, and historical Equestria as a whole. I love how Sombra's tragic flaws are mostly positive attributes, which makes the inevitable conclusion all the stronger."  It all added up to a package worth the time spent in adjusting to its presentation.  "The more I think about it, the more impressive I find this story to be," Chris said. "The Black King captured my imagination in a way few fanfics do, and I feel like that's the definition of something worth spotlighting."

Read on for our author interview, in which Wellspring discusses showy footnotes, writing archetypically, and the evil of Cervantes.


Give us the standard biography.

Male, 24 y.o., college philosophy and sociology teacher, single.
Bench Press: 165lbs
OHP: 115lbs
Squat: 265lbs
Deadlift: 325lbs

How did you come up with your handle/penname?

It's a synonym for fountainhead, which is a reference to Ayn Rand's novel.

Who's your favorite pony?

Pinkie Pie/Pinkamena Diane Pie

What's your favorite episode?

Season 5, Episode 24 "The Mane Attraction"

What do you get from the show?

Re-inspiration

What do you want from life?

Time

Why do you write?

To practice my English.

What advice do you have for the authors out there?

Read my blog: The Epistemology of Style.

You’ve already provided some background on the style and sources of this story in a blogpost, and I’d like to ask you to expand on something from there.  You say that your ponies, like Malory’s knights in Le Mort D’Arthur, are essentially archetypes defined by a single salient characteristic.  How does a story which uses archetypes instead of true “characters” influence the construction of the narrative itself, and how to you keep a story moving forward when its cast doesn’t have more than the most basic sort of motivation?

Archetypes are most workable when used with the "Tell-All" style, as Arthurian—The Black King was written. How they influence the narrative is heavily dependent on what literary school is the work grounded upon, i.e. either being Romanticism or Naturalism. Since archetypes are merely various differentia to the same genus, it would seem counterintuitive, at first, to use them in Romantic literature when ancient Greek theatre defined it as "Man having free will" or, as it translates to writing, "Character-driven plot." Since goal-orientedness is at the core of this school, characters without intrinsic motivation makes it a challenge to outline the plot where there is no single "character-purpose" to revolve the story around. The key here is events, or, to be more specific, logical continuity of events. In a Tell-All Romantic story that uses archetypes, one method of building  linear coherence is the systematic and purposeful series of events arising based upon the reaction (not initiative) of the said archetypes based from previous events. Due to this, for ease of plotting it is highly advisable that, first and foremost, the writer must already know the climax and ending of his/her story and then work backwards from there.

TL;DR Instead of asking "What would these characters do next?", ask "What should the next logical events be, and how would my archetypes react to this?"

All the inspirations you cite for your story, ancient and modern alike, deal heavily in explicit morals and unambiguous authorial “lessons” to the reader.  Could you expound a bit on what messages, specifically, you want a reader to take away from this?

Moral lesson? Chivalry still counts, for yourself if not for society.

Literary lesson? Don't be afraid to experiment with the writing style and try something new.

There are a number of metafictional elements to this story, even beyond its conceit of being an in-universe piece of fiction.  What were your goals in including things like the footnotes and afterwords by canon characters?

In all frankness, my end-goal for that is practice and experimentation.

In relation to the fic, however, it is to give greater depth to the story so much so that the universe becomes a character in itself. In a Tell-All style as well, the footnotes and afterwards provides just enough detail to "Show" the backdrop of the story.

On the subject of the afterwords: although it’s clear where your sympathies as an author lie, do you consider Clover and Words’ opinions of the story fair or reasonable?  More broadly, to what extent (if at all!) do you view it as appropriate to judge a piece of fiction by the moral standards, storytelling practices, or expectations of historical accuracy of an era other than the one in which it was written?

Clover's afterword is a reaction against common criticisms of naturalists to romantic works. Though he sympathizes with Whisperwind, he makes it a point to imply that the two literary schools have differing standard of values.

Words Worth's judgement is fair from the perspective of an academic and a historian, but not that of a novelist. He symbolizes the school of classical realism, i.e. discrediting everything that has, or can have, no bearing in reality whatsoever.

I do not only think it is only appropriate but, rather, mandatory that a story is to be judged regardless of the current zeitgeist, practices, accuracy, of whatever era it was written in or being read on. This is because, as human beings, we pass judgements automatically and, most of the time, subconsciously. The end-product of this judgement comes in the form of an emotion. The only question is whether this judgement is purposely and consciously identified, or just simply summed up to a passing feeling of "I like it" or "I don't like it."

Judgement, however, can and must be discriminated. In any work of fiction, the technical and philosophical aspects must be judged separately.

As an example, I judge Don Quixote de la Mancha by Miguel de Cervantes as an atrociously evil book because it preaches the absurdity of chivalry. However, I similarly judge it as one of the best literary pieces that has ever been produced in terms of style, content, pacing, etc.

Is there anything else you'd like to add?

As someone who is not a native English speaker, Arthurian—The Black King was a challenge. I had to keep in mind a lot of things during writing: the MLP canon, the in-universe settings, the phrases and expression, the timeline using the H.A. and L.B. Calendars, etc. Not to mention that it was my first attempt at self-editing (hence the myriad of grammar errors), medieval fantasy, archaic language, Tell-All style, metafiction, and world building.

In all honesty, three years since it's publication, I did not expect Arthurian—The Black King to resurface again. What was once a 20k-word fanfic written for practice somehow managing to get itself featured in RCL is quite an honor. I cannot help but ascribe the same feeling of serendipitous romanticism when the curators rediscovered this old relic from the past no differently than how Twilight Sparkle similarly unearthed Sir Sombra de Onyx.

You can read Arthurian—The Black King at FIMFiction.net. Read more interviews right here at the Royal Canterlot Library, or suggest stories for us to feature at our Fimfiction group.

Comments ( 3 )

This one definitely earned the spotlight.

Archetypes are most workable when used with the "Tell-All" style, as Arthurian—The Black King was written. How they influence the narrative is heavily dependent on what literary school is the work grounded upon, i.e. either being Romanticism or Naturalism.

Ah, glad to see another fan of the works of Ayn Rand, and her literary theories! This sells me on your novel alone. Congratulations on getting into the RCL!

To practice my English

So, also like Ayn Rand, English is the language of your choice, not of your birth? I'm all the more amazed.

>English not first language
>writes better than most English speakers I know
>mfw
media.giphy.com/media/Rojiw2pQ3Y63u/giphy-facebook_s.jpg

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