Nicholas ([info]nhw) wrote,
@ 2005-11-11 20:44:00
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Entry tags:bookblog 2005, doctor who, doctor who: 08, doctor who: spinoff fiction, writer: paul leonard

November Books 8) Doctor Who: Genocide
8) Doctor Who: Genocide, by Paul Leonard

Picked this up really as an experiment at WorldCon. I never saw the Eighth Doctor TV movie, so this is my first encounter with him; I had no idea if his companion, Sam, was canonical or not though I now learn from Wikipedia that she had an exciting life; but the story also features Jo Grant, and it's not so long since I watched "The Green Death".

Well, it's not bad. The central plot is a set of time paradoxes - will humanity survive, or will we be displaced by humane, environmentally conscious equine quadrupeds who are very reminiscent of Swift's Houyhnhnms? The Doctor has to choose one way or the other, and either way an entire race may be destroyed, hence the genocide of the title. I felt there were one or two problems with the internal chronology of the book which could not be smoothed over by time-travel, and too many cases of a) characters promising not to move from a safe location, then immediately doing so and b) "I'm going to kill you now!" "No you're not." "Okay, I won't kill you now but I might kill you later!" And one plot twist was foreshadowed many years ago by Douglas Adams, but I thought Paul Leonard invested it with a certain dignity (leaving a message in the basalt, surely inspired by the towel in the prehistoric volcano). Overall it was just about worth the £2 I paid for it.

I'm stunned to discover that there are no less than 73 books in the Eighth Doctor Adventures series! Are any of them better than this? If so, I'd be interested in looking at them...



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[info]purplepooka
2005-11-11 08:04 pm UTC (link)
I recently rather enjoyed "The Year of Intelligent Tigers" by [info]kateorman.
You're missing nothing on the telemovie front, and I don't know if even the Eighth Doctor himself is canonical, let alone his companions...

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[info]djm4
2005-11-11 09:06 pm UTC (link)
He's canonical, according to Russell T Davies, but only to the extent of the 1996 TV movie, not the books.

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[info]purplepooka
2005-11-11 10:43 pm UTC (link)
Ah, but is Russel T. Davies canonical? Or am I a heretic for suggesting he isn't?

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[info]djm4
2005-11-11 09:05 pm UTC (link)
Alien Bodies by Lawrence Miles is worth a look. Several of the later ones are pretty good, but need a certain amount of backstory to make much sense of them. Emotional Chemistry doesn't, though, and I rather liked it.

I've got most of them, so could lend you a couple if we ever contrived to meet up... ;-)

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[info]kharin
2005-11-11 09:10 pm UTC (link)
Sam is not canonical. Paul Leonard is not an author I care for; try something by Steve Lyons, Lance Parkin, Mags Halliday, Lawrence Miles or Nick Walters. Alternatively, try the ebooks here (except scales of injustice, which is rubbish).

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[info]purplepooka
2005-11-11 10:46 pm UTC (link)
I have a cabinetful of new adventures, missing adventures and BBC books you can borrow if you're ever passing. I haven't read most of them and I'm not very likely to get around to it. I do enjoy Jon Blum and Kate Orman's stuff, though.

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[info]loveandgarbage
2007-01-04 01:54 pm UTC (link)
DIrected here via your Eight Doctors review. Leonard wrote an interesting EDA - The Turing TEst where an amnesiac eighth doctor is stranded on earth without TARDIS. It features Alan Turing, Graham Greene, and Joe Heller in strands narrated by each. The Doctor WHo Ratings Guide and Jade Pagoda lists are both extremely complimentary about it.

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