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This has been cluttering up my harddrive for some time, and I want to get it out there before it drives me nuts. It's the first part of the 1602/A:TS crossover I owe [livejournal.com profile] selenak. It's unbetaed as yet, so comments and corrections are welcome. The whole story is likely to come to about 15 parts, I think, and is set in a mish-mash of the 1602 and A:TS worlds - it is not our history (and American History scholars should pick this up from this part onwards), but is hopefully sufficiently close to what passes for it in the Angelverse.



Ge bene Hinnom

Date: 2006-09-18 12:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] selenak.livejournal.com
Ohhhhhhhhh. That's genius, that is. It never occured to me how Slayers would fit in the 1602-verse: The distinction between "Blessed" and "Witchbreed" - and yet trade goods both - so chilling, and makes sense in both 'verses.

I think we should consider ourselves to be engaged now.

Date: 2006-09-23 04:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] selenak.livejournal.com
Fine. As long as I get to choose the place.

Date: 2007-01-28 12:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] spuffyduds.livejournal.com
Sorry to come to this so awfully late--the long-lasting crud I had made me pretty sure that my brain wasn't working well enough for extensive feedback. (Which may very well still be the case...hee!)


Anyway: I loved this. I love the way the 1602 and Slayer mythologies are being twined together, and that "Blessed" and "Witchbreed" are being seen (accurately?) as two names for the same thing. (Is this version of Scott Summers going to be an ancestor of Buffy?)In that vein (hah!) I am quite pleased that the Master is the one harrowing the Virginia colony.

I am particularly fond of your emphasis on social class, who has to be polite to whom, the maid's aghastness at having insulted her "better" after she blurts out that the child is afraid. That's always a fascinating perspective, and not one we got to see a lot of in the Buffyverse after they moved past the rigid social divides of high school.

Some of my favorite (mostly chilling) lines:

are those children?!" He hurriedly placed Javier into a chair and loped to the corner, to undo the bundle's bindings.

"Of a sort," the stranger said


to nurse or to spit,

Javier smiled, and the stranger was not comforted by it.

All in all you do a great job of getting across the expediency and practicality with which these children are being traded--very disturbing, very like the Watcher's Council and, in some ways, Professor X's school of today. And it's well-written, smooth and pretty, and is there more yet? Point me at it!

The only remotely critical thing I can come up with is very small: in the first section, you keep calling the baby-trading fellow "the stranger," which has an odd feel to it. He would be a stranger in Javier's perspective, but not in his own, and we're seeing the scene from his viewpoint; shouldn't he just have a name?

Again, wonderful!

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