Subject: Re: "Shopping Day"
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Posted on: 2014-07-23 13:18:00 UTC

This is a really nice piece - it really reads like a nice relaxing trip out somewhere.

I like how Doc's anger at seeing people get scammed makes him just jump in and get involved. Vania being so cheerful about pointing out to him that he'd just broken the rules was also very entertaining.

Out of interest, when Doc grabbed the bottle out of the man's hand, how surprised should the man and crowd have been? Usually PPC agents are hidden from the sight of canon characters, either by the canon itself or SEP fields depending on the author, until they interact with them, or get pointed out by someone that can spot them. Having someone snatch the quack remedy you're selling out of your hand would be a little surprising, having someone appear out of thin air to snatch it away would be really surprising.

You've got some really nice lines in here, my favourites are Doc's about having 'more petals than the Marquis', and Vania's 'Corsets, corsets, of coursets'.

The idea of a fic just cropping up in the middle of the normal world and twisting things up is very cool. And the fact that the figure noticed the agents and is now watching them is a nice end to the piece.

I spotted one mistake (and in Doc's best line too!): “I feel like a I have more petals than the Marquis.” - that 'a' shouldn't be there.

There were a couple of bits that I noticed, that just seemed like odd phrasing to me. The first is 'Carriages drawn by horses' - I'd use 'Horse-drawn carriages' here, as I think it sounds more natural. The second one is even more subjective, and that's the use of 'sidewalks' in London. It just sounds odd to me, because it's an American term - the British equivalent is 'pavements'. If this were a longer piece, I'd have asked if you wanted it Britpicked while I betaed. I'm assuming that you probably don't in this case, as that might lead to inconsistencies with the rest of their missions/interludes, and of course there's nothing wrong with American tourists using American terms while in Britain. The 'sidewalks of London' is always going to look a little odd to me though.

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