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The New Adventures: 1992-1993
Nightshade
Review:
Love and War
Review: The Doctor, having suddenly taken Ace to a funeral for one of
her Perivale friends, takes her to the planet Heaven to recuperate as he goes
on an abrupt quest to retrieve a book called The Papers of Felsecar. Ace
encounters a band of gypsy-like Travelers, some of whom hide extremely dark
secrets; she begins to fall in love with Jan, their ringleader. During a group
linkup to a virtual reality 'puterspace mechanism, Christopher, the most
mysterious of the Travelers, is apparently killed as his comrades see their
first glimpse of an enemy who is closer than they think. The Doctor, growing
increasingly aware of a grave threat to Heaven and everyone on it, meets
archaeologist Bernice Summerfield, who currently holds The Papers of
Felsecar. In the crucible of the growing danger is Ace, confused by her
love for Jan and her intense loyalty to the Doctor, and determined to bring the
two together. But by the time the Hoothi - an enormous, self-contained
necrosphere consciousness who reanimate and absorb the dead - are finished with
Heaven, Ace will have lost both Jan and the Doctor.
Though I'm inclined to nominate Paul Cornell's later novel
Human Nature as the best of the
Doctor Who novels, Love and War is a very close
runner-up and was, in my opinion, the book which redefined and redirected the
entire New Adventures series. Cornell proved that it was possible to tell a
mature and intense story against the backdrop of Doctor Who's sometimes
whimsical and more science-fantasy-oriented millieu. The author excels at
spinning a very dark horror story, capable of scaring the pants off of nearly
anyone, while still ensuring that the characters at the heart of the story are
recognizable as the Doctor and Ace as portrayed by Sylvester McCoy and Sophie
Aldred. Though harsher expletives spring from Ace's mouth, and the Doctor
reaches what is possibly the darkest, lowest ebb of his seventh incarnation's
"sinister secrets" phase. The characters' traits are amplified
somewhat, but remain true to the characters we saw in the
final season of Doctor Who on the BBC.
Though some readers initially balked at the thought of sex scenes or the word
"shit" appearing in a Doctor Who novel, I would argue that these were
all integral to the story, and the intensity of Ace's relationship with Jan was
absolutely necessary to increase the narrative stakes. And the profanity? Part
of the same package. By lashing out more viciously than usual, even to the
point of using language that might offend some purists who cling steadfastly to
the chaste BBC-TV standards of the show, Ace makes it clear that the Doctor's
manipulative tendencies have gone too far this time. And it makes her
departure all the more understandable. Even though the Doctor has once again
saved the universe, he has also played one too many games of chess with his
companion as the chief pawn. Bernice's reluctance to join the Doctor as his new
companion is all the more understandable in this light as well.
I can't recommend Love and War highly enough. It's the one Doctor Who
New Adventure that I had to buy a second copy of because, after repeated readings,
the spine of my first copy simply fell apart. It's a tightly plotted Doctor Who
story, harkening straight back to the Philip Hinchcliffe
era of classic horror stories re-told Time Lord style, but more importantly,
the emotional stakes are as critical - and as necessary to the reader's
understanding - as the dramatic stakes and the plotline. If you don't get a
lump in your throat while reading Love and War...you may want to check
yourself thoroughly for Hoothi spores.
Transit
Review:
The Highest Science
- written by Gareth Roberts
Review:
The Pit
Review:
Deceit
- written by Peter Darvill-Evans
Review:
Lucifer Rising
- written by Jim Mortimore & Andy Lane
Review:
White Darkness
- written by David A. McIntee
Review:
Shadowmind
- written by Christopher Bulis
Review:
DOCTOR WHO and all related characters and placenames
are the property of the British Broadcasting Corporation. This document is not
intended to infringe upon the BBC's copyright in any way. The author(s)
make no attempt - in using the names described herein - to supercede the
copyrights of the copyright holders, nor are these files officially sanctioned,
licensed, or endorsed by the shows' creators or producers.
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