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The New Adventures: 1993
Birthright
- written by Nigel Robinson
Review:
Iceberg
Review:
Blood Heat
Review:
The Dimension Riders
Review:
The Left-Handed Hummingbird
Review:
Conundrum
Review:
No Future
original title: Anarchy In The U.K.
Review: The Doctor, Benny and Ace, having survived a series of narrow escapes
in incidents where time and history have changed around them, go under deep
cover in 1976 London. The burgeoning punk rock movement, just as in the
history that the Doctor and his companions remember, is spawning a movement
toward anarchy. But unlike the time travelers' memories, this time the push
toward anarchy is all too real - a terrorist organization known as Black
Star firebombs Big Ben, and Queen Elizabeth II narrowly escapes
assassiantion. In the midst of all this, Benny has become the lead singer
of a punk band called Plasticine, the Doctor broods over his inability to
understand the changes in the timeline, let alone restore things to normal,
and Ace seems to take anarchy to heart, routinely interfering in both the
Doctor's and Benny's activities. Even U.N.I.T. has been somehow changed,
and Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart has the Doctor locked up in a cell. And in
the background, another time traveler waits and schemes, planning to use a
horrifyingly dangerous creature to further corrupt time and conquer Earth. He
is a fellow Time Lord who is beating the Doctor at his own manipulative
game.
Though author Paul Cornell has decried No Future as his least favorite
of his Doctor Who New Adventures, I have always found it very enjoyable, and
for the record, I'd certainly place it at least a notch above Oh No It
Isn't! and possibly even Happy Endings,
two of Cornell's other books.
Though the use of so many past elements of the series - the Doctor's Time
Lord opponent (I'm not going to spoil this surprise for you, and I'm sure
it's not who you expect), the Chronovore (from season 9's The
Time Monster), U.N.I.T., the Vardans
- is often a sign of a wildly out-of-control fan fic, Cornell manages to weave
them all into the same story skillfully, along with numerous in-jokes, numerous
meaningful references to other past stories (such as Planet
of the Spiders, Terror of the Zygons and
Mawdryn Undead) and past books (strong
ties to Cornell's own Love and War), and a good,
menacing story. Though the book's dialogue is rife with in-jokes and positively
surreal humorous scenes, it's all in deadly earnest.
At the center of it all is Ace, and we're never quite sure whose side
she's on anymore. This, by the way, is the embittered, post-Deceit,
grown-up, and near-homicial Ace we're talking about. I never cared much for
Ace's return as a stone cold killer after Love and War, but it's a
testament to Cornell's skill that he turned the character around and managed
to evoke an emotional connection with the reader. Until I read No Future,
I had been silently damning whoever thought of bringing back Ace's character
in this form. Paul Cornell made it work.
There are some gaps in the plotting - namely, a more-obvious-than-usual
deus ex machina which allows the Doctor to escape from certain death - and
Cornell's own biggest peeve with the book does have merit: virtually the
entire next-to-last chapter is an expository scene where all the surviving
heroes gather round so the Doctor can explain how he won, what he knew and
when, and so on. This is an irritating enough practice on television, but
it becomes quite silly in print.
Cornell's characterizations of the Doctor, Benny, Ace and the Brigadier
are sharp, and expand on the character's TV personalities without explicitly
contradicting any established information. Perhaps the greatest triumph of
No Future is the evolution of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. The Brigadier
we see in this book has evolved and matured from the Brigadier as seen in
Jon Pertwee's era and early on in Tom Baker's era. Having taken a cue from
the Doctor, Lethbridge-Stewart has embarked on a self-discovering journey of
Buddhism - and his meditations are all that save him from the evil which has
infiltrated U.N.I.T. And though the Brigadier stoically assists the Doctor
throughout the book, this adventure exhausts him...to the point of the
nervous breakdown which drove him to retire from active duty and take up
teaching in the 1983 story Mawdryn Undead.
Cornell not only fills in major blanks in Doctor Who continuity, but does it quite
credibly.
Despite what the author says, this is a ripping good read, even if only
for the cheap chuckle as U.N.I.T. takes down Paul
McCartney and his band with tranquilizer darts. Naturally the Brigadier says,
"Chap with Wings! Five rounds rapid!"
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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