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 Blake's 7: Their First Adventure

When his government-enforced brainwashing begins to wear off, former resistance
leader Roj Blake is convicted for a crime he didn't commit and sentenced to life
on a penal planet called Cygnus Alpha. During the prison ship voyage, Blake
meets several other prisoners with no love for the totalitarian Federation:
expert computer hacker Avon, hard-bitten smuggler Jenna, good-hearted (but,
alas, also weak-hearted) thief Vila, and a gentle giant named Gan who is
prevented from using deadly force by a violence-inhibiting brain implant (also
courtesy of the Federation legal system). Combining their talents, Blake and
the others turn the tables on their captors, seizing control of the prison ship,
but their hijacking attempt doesn't last long. Still en route to Cygnus Alpha,
the ship encounters a larger craft of unknown alien origins, and the prison ship
skipper loses several men trying to board and salvage the alien vessel. He then
decides to use Blake and the other prisoners instead, but they survive the
initial onslaught of the alien ship's auto-defense systems, undock from the
prison ship, and make a run for it. Though Avon and Jenna are skeptical, Blake
insists on using their new vehicle - dubbed the Liberator - to go to Cygnus
Alpha and free more of the prisoners.

A light-speed adaptation of the first three episodes of the BBC's cult TV
classic Blake's 7, Blake's 7: Their
First Adventure rockets through three hour-long scripts with all the
literary verve of an early Doctor Who novelization
by Terrance Dicks. (That is to say,
little if anything is added to the existing text of the scripts.) In fact, the
Doctor Who novelization comparison is apt since, for some baffling reason, the
trio of Trevor Hoyle's Blake's 7 novelizations seem to have been aimed squarely
at a younger audience. This element of the show's marketing has always
fascinated me - die-cast toys, puzzle-filled
annuals, a comic book, and now these books...all of it seemed to assume
that Blake's 7 was being aimed at the same age group as Doctor Who. As a result,
Their First Adventure seems a bit watered down, with some of the early
episodes' extreme violence (or at least suggestions of violence) excised or
curiously reduced in impact.
Trevor Hoyle wrote three novelizations during the life span of the series.
In addition to Their First Adventure, he adapted three more of Terry Nation's first season scripts into the book Project
Avalon, and performed what was easily his most drastic alteration of content
and tone in Scorpio Attack, an amalgamation of three or four early fourth-season scripts.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster


- Year: 1979 / reprinted 1988
- Author: Trevor Hoyle
- Genre: franchise science fiction
- Publisher: Citadel
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