Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts

8.05.2014

Review: Doctor Who: Into The Nowhere (Time Trips) by Jenny T. Colgan

Title: Into the Nowhere
Series: Doctor Who: Time Trips
Author: Jenny T. Colgan
Publication Date: January 16th, 2014
Publisher: BBC Digital
Genre: Sci Fi
Pages: 49
ISBN13: 978-1448141838
Source: ARC from Publisher
Rating:

Synopsis (from Goodreads):
The Eleventh Doctor and Clara land on an unknown alien planet. To the Doctor's delight and Clara's astonishment, it really is unknown. It's a planet the Doctor has never seen. It's not on any maps, it's not referenced on any star charts or in the TARDIS data banks. It doesn't even have a name. What could be so terrible that its existence has been erased?
A | B&N | Gr



Jenny T. Colgan was born in 1972 in Prestwick, Ayrshire, Scotland, UK. After studying at Edinburgh University, she worked for six years in the health service, moonlighting as a cartoonist and a stand-up comic, before the publication of her first novel Amanda's Wedding in 2000. In 2013, her novel "Welcome to Rosie Hopkin's Sweetshop of Dreams" won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association. She is now working on her next novel. 

She is married with Andrew, a marine engineer, and had three children, Wallace, Michael-Francis, and Delphie. She mostly lives in France, with frequent visits to London. She occasionally writes for The Guardian newspaper, as well as a TV series.

Her Doctor Who novel Dark Horizons is published under the name J.T. Colgan.




          Doctor Who: Into the Nowhere is the eleventh doctor’s turn to be captured in print by the Time Trips series.  He and Clara stumble upon a mysterious planet with no name or known history.  Not even the TARDIS knows where they are.  Not long after they leave the safety of the TARDIS, they realize that the world might not want its secrets uncovered and it seems as if the elements themselves turn against the Doctor and his companion.  

      The Doctor and Clara encounter a dizzying number of obstacles from the get-go in this fast-paced mystery.  At times there was so much being thrown at them that it seemed chaotic, in a nail biting and enjoyable sense.  For instance, at one point they escape a moving forest closing in on them, run into a conflagration of sorts, jump through it and almost fall off a cliff with a valley full of huge maggots beneath and an animated skeleton on the other side. Then they get attacked by a giant snake, all without catching their breath. Whatever forces exist on this planet, mean business. 

     All the authors that write for this series have done an exceptional job at writing their characters into some original and entertaining circumstances. The same can certainly be said for Jenny Colgan in this story.  What has consistently amazed me with every installment in this series, is the way the authors are able to replicate the mannerisms and details from the characters we know and love from the television show, and make them believable. The eleventh doctor is full of quirk and insanity, energy and goofiness.  Jenny has done Matt Smith proud with her installment, just as she has done a service for Whovians by creating this wonderfully diverting short story. Clara seemed to be a bit angrier than usual, and maybe a tad whiney at times but such is the lot for a Doctor Who companion. I didn't feel that her character was as believable as the Doctor for most of the story but that doesn't hurt things too badly. 

     As long as you don’t expect to have all the answers by the end, you won’t be disappointed by Into the Nowhere.  It’s funny and action packed and it’s chocked full of timey-wimey adventure that any fan would enjoy.  In looking back, the fact that there were still questions at the end didn’t detract from my over-all enjoyment of the story.  The missing pieces add to the story and I hope one day to read (or possibly see) more from this story-line in the future. 

7.02.2014

Review: Doctor Who: A Handful of Stardust (Time Trips) by Jake Arnott

Title: Doctor Who: A Handful of Stardust
Series: Time Trips
Author: Jake Arnott
Publication Date: April 3rd, 2014
Publisher: BBC Digital
Genre: Science Fiction
Pages: 45
ISBN13: 1448141850
Source: ARC from Publisher
Rating:

Synopsis (from Goodreads):
The TARDIS is diverted to England in 1572, and the Sixth Doctor and Peri meet John Dee - 'mathematician, astrologer, alchemist, magician, and the greatest mind of our time'. ('Only of your time?', the Doctor asks, unimpressed.) But what brought them here? When the Doctor discovers that Dee and his assistant have come across a 'great disturbance in the cosmos, in the constellation of Cassiopeia,' he realizes that they are all in terrible danger.

A | B&N | Gr




Jake Arnott was born in 1961 in Buckinghamshire, England. He is best known for his trilogy of crime novels, which recreate the post-war heyday of the London gangland scene and its attendant ‘showbiz’ associations, brilliantly evoked and by turns glamorous or seedy.




  A Handful of Stardust is a short story in the Time Trips series from BBC books.  I have taken a keen interest in these Doctor Who stories as of late.  I will be doing a review on a different short story every Wednesday until the month of the premier of the new season of Doctor Who.  A Handful of Stardust was the first in this string of reviews and the first Doctor Who short story I have ever read.  Going into it I didn’t quite know what to expect but I found that the short story format lends itself more readily to the Doctor Who Universe because it follows the same rhythm as the episodes.  Every page is action and no filler, just like a short story should be.
A Handful of Stardust follows the story of the 6th Doctor and Peri as they get pulled out of time and space by John Dee and his assistant Thomas.  It doesn’t take long before he realizes there is something dark afoot in post Dark-age England.  Someone has given John Dee futuristic technology and is manipulating his thirst for forbidden knowledge.  Someone who is described as being in between a bachelor and a doctor... In case you hadn’t guessed, the Doctor’s old nemesis, “The Master” has come back to play and the fate of the world (as usual) is in the balance. 
Jake Arnott was successful in dealing with some pretty heady issues in a very interesting way.   Imperialism, human nature and even the church are some of the topics discussed.  There’s an especially interesting scene where the master and Peri and Thomas (John Dee’s assistant) argue over the imperialism of England and the settling of the Americas.  The Doctor and John Dee also have some lively debates that I thoroughly enjoyed.  The plot itself was inventive and engaging but could have used a couple more pages of fleshing out.  I know that it is difficult to do in a short story format but I would have enjoyed a little more conflict and character interaction.  Over all, I would re-read this book in the future.  I would recommend it to any Doctor Who fan or sci fi guru and I am looking forward to reading more in this series.