Table of Contents

Races | Culture

FEDERAL LIBRARY OF MORNINGSTAR

Overview

The Federal Library of Morningstar, inaugurated in August 2635, is part of the Federal Library System. Operated under the Federal News Agency, it provides curated access to knowledge and literature selected via GAIA’s Federal Longlist.

Serving a timber-based settlement on the edge of the wilderness, the library functions as both an educational hub and a cultural anchor, embodying the principles of Communardism and resource-efficient knowledge sharing.

Federal Libraries are also part of the official distribution network of the Weekly Gazette, ensuring that citizens can access current news alongside curated books and reference works.

History

Built as the fourth branch of the Federal Library System, the Morningstar library was intended to integrate cultural life into a community shaped by forestry, logging, and communal labor. Its inauguration in 2635 was celebrated locally with readings from Earth frontier tales, underscoring its symbolic connection to settlement and survival.

Architectural Significance

With log-beam ceilings, slanted roofs, and stone foundations, the structure resembles a frontier lodge more than a traditional institution, blending utility with cultural identity.

Building Structure

Look and Feel

The Morningstar library feels like a communal lodge, with warm timber walls, the scent of resin and paper, and the soft creak of wooden floors. Candlelight and wide windows create a twilight glow, while the stone hearth keeps the interior temperate in the damp forest air.

Every borrowed book is logged in handwritten ledgers, and event posters carved into wooden plaques hang from the walls. The atmosphere is welcoming yet serious: a place where knowledge and culture are carefully tended as part of the settlement’s survival.

Roles and Responsibilities

Public Access, Operating Hours and Rhythm

Lending Rules

Books and Genres

The Federal Library of Morningstar offers curated collections from the Federal Longlist. Each genre carries cultural and gameplay value for PCs:

Genre Examples Information Value for PCs
Fiction Earth frontier novels, wilderness tales Offers cultural parallels; allegories for survival and adaptation.
Non-Fiction Forestry manuals, Earth sciences, GAIA studies on Native ecology Provides PCs tactical survival and environmental knowledge.
Reference Works Federal Encyclopedia, dictionaries, legal texts Useful for rules, precedents, and academic authority in missions.
Education GAIA-approved forestry and carpentry guides Supports PCs with technical context for wilderness and crafting missions.

Security Measures

Player Interaction Possibilities

Legal (Common Interactions)

Illegal

Tactical Advice for Dungeon Masters

Federal Libraries within the Federal Confederation: