Subject: Things to fix
Author:
Posted on: 2014-05-16 07:35:00 UTC

Let's see, then:
"...an elf-like girl with dead white skin, hair growing all the way along her spine, and emerald green eyes."
This ought to be "emerald-green". Though that error might be from within the 'fic; I'm not certain.

"Shortly after leaving Rivendell...or where Selene should be."
"Should be" should be "should have been", I think. Switching tenses mid-sentence is a charge! :-p

"Selene shook her head. "Come one, we'd better catch up with the Fellowship.""
"Come on" is intended here, I think.

""The author's a non-Native speaker..."
Does "Native" need the capital N? This is another one where I'm not sure whether it's an error or a stylistic choice.

"...they leapt through Dafydd's hastily opened portal to the next chapter."
"hastily-opened", please. Missing hyphens are a bit of a pet peeve of mine.

""Well, onto the next chapter.""
This should be "on to", unless Dafydd is climbing on top of the next chapter.

"...being reduced to a small blackened crater..."
Again, this ought to be past continuous, not present continuous. "Having been" for "being", that is.

""It could actually be a coincidence." maintained Selene." Comma at the end of speech.

"...five hundred years worth of self-preservation instinct."
"years" needs an apostrophe at the end.

"...not into the next chapter..."
You can't tell here, but the ot of "not" are italic in the story, while the n isn't.

"...who were sitting amidst the rubble smoking."
Needs a comma between "rubble" and "smoking".

"Climbing painfully to his feet, Dafydd, looked around..."
Comma after "Dafydd" is unneeded.

"Dafydd nodded, and then glanced at the word."
I assume this is meant to be "Words".

"...watching the 'Sue having a rather a random moment of Angst."
"having rather" - no "a".

"All that they're going to is walk the Paths of the Dead..."
Missing word: ought to be "going to do".

"...between Gondor and Mordor when he composure started to leave her..."
"her", not "he".

"As soon as she saw the weapon, Alumia had dived for the nearest tree and merged with it."
Again, changing tense mid-sentence. "had seen" for "saw" is better.

"... but to Selene's disappointment, was seemingly uninjured."
Either "but, to Selene's disappointment, was..." or "but t Selene's disappointment was..." Either bracket the inset with commas or use none.

I'll stop here, because I have to head home. More will come on Monday. And I hope I haven't come across too harshly/rudely. I really enjoy your work; I'm just a little bit of a grammar Nazi. At least you use British spelling.
Oh, and there are a whole lot of places where you've put a comma where I'd use a semicolon, but I let them go because it's fairly subjective.

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