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A Well Done Trip in Space

What:The Monsters Inside (BBC New Series Adventures novels)
By:Manny, Los Angeles, California, America
Date:Wednesday 29 March 2006
Rating:   9

The second Doctor Who book I've read. And with that,I have to say that I couldn't put it done. Even getting up to answer the phone was difficult to do when reading this book, the book is just that good.

The nice thing about it is that, if you're new to the show, the book acts like a guide, explaining little details that you may know or not. And with that it adds a better feel to the characters because you gain a better understanding of where they stand.

This book also reads like a missing ep from the show. So, once again this is a must read.

In fact from the Doctor Who books I've read, at this point only 2, these have brought back my love for reading. I hope to enjoy more adventures with the Doctor and Rose.



Smashing read!!

What:The Deviant Strain (BBC New Series Adventures novels)
By:Manny, Los Angeles, California, America
Date:Wednesday 29 March 2006
Rating:   8

This is the first Doctor Who book that I have read as here in the states we've just gotten the new season of Doctor Who on Sci-Fi. And this was a real treat for a newbie to the show.

I didn't have to know who the characters were as this book fills in those spots. After watching the few eps that have aired here in the states, this books reads like one of the the eps. It's a great read all about and you can't put it down. Smashing!



It never failed to bore...

What:The Adventuress of Henrietta Street (BBC Eighth Doctor novels)
By:Mike McGovern, Edmonton, Alberta
Date:Monday 27 March 2006
Rating:   1

I hate to be against a book as much as this, but I am. I should have put it down and contemplated my workbook. Pretty much the same thing. Does Lawrence Miles know how to entertain? You bet he does!

History lesson: who likes reading something that claims to be history, but isn't, yet is written like my incredibly exciting (boring) "Economics of Medieval France" history textbook? How did Lawrence Miles discover that people love reading textbooks in their spare time? How did he figure out how to write like one? It's just skill.

Once again the Doctor is nowhere to be seen, but that's all right, because Doctor Who isn't really about the Doctor, is it? It's about extremely essential extra characters who loiter in the street, people with no point who vaguely resemble a certain Vampire Slayer (ugh), and very slow, slow, slow prose that gives us that warm glow inside which tells us THIS AUTHOR REALLY CARES.

He knows how to tell a story (er, textbook,) to keep the reader rivetted with tons and tons of info. that we really might need, as in Sometime Never, and to give us the motivation to raise chickens, to start a farm, anything but to continue this idiotic book.

Who is this man? Where are the Irish? How did Lord Lucan escape?

The Adventuress of Henrietta Street is, obviously, fantastic. The most excellent thing ever written. It will bore you to death. That is, after all, what we're all after, isn't it?





Splendid History.

What:World Game (BBC Past Doctor novels)
By:Mike McGovern, Edmonton, Alberta
Date:Monday 27 March 2006
Rating:   10

Terrance Dicks appears to have devoted himself to novelizing the great periods of history using the Doctor Who format. The most interesting historical novel I have yet seen.

The beginning is a little stunted, with Terrance quoting directly from other novels of his, with minor changes. A bit slow here. Knowledge of his other novel "Players" is necessary to make sense of this.

The very first section of the book actually comes verbatim from his Target novel "The Spearhead From Space," but interestingly, the ending is different.

The book really begins to hum when the Doctor confronts a phony official in France. (This is not a spoiler.) Each man produces more and more papers, authority documents, identifications, trying to convince the powers that be that they are who they say they are. All the while they grow angrier and angrier with each other.

I laughed out loud with the momentum of it all. Terrence may be older, but he has not lost his flair for character clashes.

Terrence has achieved something which no other author, to my knowledge, ever has. He has made history fun. He has brought it to life so we can see what Napoleon saw, feel how Wellington felt on the battlefield, experience the tension of famous battles that have long since become dry and stale in history books, their essential life forgotten.

I actually believe that books like Terrence's matter more than traditional historical accounts. "World Game" was obviously well-researched to make it as close as possible to reality, but you learn tons more by seeing great history in action, start to finish, than by reading disjointed academic fact books.

I have read of the Battle of Waterloo for years, but every one of the learned history texts I used completely failed to give me the rich experience that Terrence produced in this novel. I learned things about the actual process of battle that were never even hinted at in other writings, but which Napoleon and others with him really would have experienced.

Someone should recommend Terrence for the "Distinguished Contribution to English Letters" award. Recreation of genuine historical events deserves more recognition, and one must never underestimate the value of being able to tell a good story with flair and charm.

The general stuffiness of real history is one of the big reasons most people have a hard time learning about their culture and its past - historians make it sound so boring. It is hard to approach something which seems boring.

Excellent book, excellent story. Some genuine brainwork went into this. Read it for the fun.



Loved It

What:Time and Relative (Telos novellas)
By:Lawson, Jamie., Kent
Date:Monday 27 March 2006
Rating:   8


I loved this story. It sets up the scene well for An Unearthly Child while telling a cracking story in the meantime. This Novel is told from Susan’s point of View and combines her thoughts and feelings of Earth and contrasts how Alien and Human she is at the same time.

To me the story acts as an unofficial Pilot episode which shows a more rigid side to The Doctors character before it is touched by humanity and becomes officially "Nanny to Space and Time."

An Excellent Read highly recommended! :-)



What if the Doctor was real?

What:Who Killed Kennedy: (Miscellaneous original novels)
By:J. D. Means, Spokane, WA
Date:Tuesday 21 March 2006
Rating:   10

What would it be like to live in the world of the Doctor? How would the average person cope with Daleks, Autons or the Master?

This book is a different kind of Doctor Who novel, in which the Doctor is more of a supporting character. The main character, David Bishop, is a New Zealand native reporter working for the London Times, until his controvertial report on UNIT leads to his losing his job and reputation. Unperterbed, Bishop continues his investigations as a freelance journalist, hoping to uncover the truth about this military unit and the so-called "Doctor".

Taking its cue from the Kurt Busiek/Alex Ross graphic novel Marvels, this book takes key moments from the series(notably the Jon Pertwee years) and shows them from a different point of view. The end result, with its conspiracy theory twists and turns, its numerous guest stars from various points of Dr. Who history, and its ratcheting suspence, is one wild and entertaining ride, leading(as the title suggests) to the book depository in Dallas in 1964.



It was okay

What:Invasion of the Dinosaurs (BBC classic series videos)
By:Matthew Houliston, Edinburgh
Date:Monday 20 March 2006
Rating:   7

Quite good plot.Special effects could of been way better,but I suppose it was the best they could do at that time.



Bl**dy AWFUL

What:Scaredy Cat (Big Finish: The Monthly Adventures)
By:Steve Broemer, Folkestone
Date:Saturday 18 March 2006
Rating:   2

Nuff said



This play is so drably complicated ...

What:Night Thoughts (Big Finish: The Monthly Adventures)
By:Phil Ince, Standing over your imminent grave
Date:Thursday 16 March 2006
Rating:   1

... because it is truthless.

This lousy production is populated by beings nominally human yet without a trace of plausible human behaviour. There is no drama because there are no characters.

Psychologically scarred children discover their secret father and are immediately healed. Sociopaths bluster and rant. Suicides jibber and screech. Favoured Doctor / companion combos read huge swathes of stilted, incompetent fanwank in the direst, most leaden prose.

Meritless, laborious and entirely unentertaining. Avoid.

Bernard Kay manages to salvage something but his fellow performers are almost beyond awful; a regrettable inevitability given their talents and this script.

This play is so drably complicated because it is truthless.



FANTASTIC ! 10/10

What:The Invasion (TV episode audio soundtracks)
By:Matthew houliston, Edinburgh
Date:Monday 13 March 2006
Rating:   10

The ultimate adventure with the cybermen the u.n.i.t idea worked perfectly.It is annoying that it is a missing episode it would of been great to see it.



Daleks are coming, run for the hills!

What:The Dalek Invasion of Earth (BBC classic series videos)
By:the Traveller, London 2164
Date:Saturday 11 March 2006
Rating:   7

Another Dalek epic this time set in London. The shots of the deserted city are fantastic, and the whole serial feels like Survivors before its time. However, the model shots of the Saucers are terrible and the Robomen are irritating if a little creepy.
A good tale spoilt by the shoddy effects work.



Start at the very beginning...

What:The Beginning (BBC classic series DVDs/Blu-rays)
By:the Traveller, a Junkyard...where it all began
Date:Saturday 11 March 2006
Rating:   10

After the recent 2005 season One boxset comes another 3 disc set, with the first three stories ever broadcast, along with a load of extras providing a detailed insight in what really was The Beginning. And a great beginning it is too...

AN UNEARTHLY CHILD
A fantastic first episode leads into a tense and gritty caveman story. William Hartnell and co give great performances and the TARDIS appears impressively 'big' on the inside compared to what it looks like in later years.

THE DALEKS
The Daleks are inspired creations, and the series begins to find its feet. The Thals are disappointing and although the story is slightly long, it certainly feels like an epic adventure.

THE EDGE OF DESTRUCTION
A cheap 2 parter in the TARDIS leads to the characters widly accusing each other of everything under the sun, a clock melting unconvincingly, and Susan going barmy with a pair of rather dangerous looking scissors.
Very strange indeed...



One of the best...

What:Doctor Who and the Silurians (BBC classic series videos)
By:the Traveller, a cave in Derbyshire
Date:Saturday 11 March 2006
Rating:   9

A 7 parter epic which never becomes dull or predictable. The cast are all on top form and the Silurians are good monsters, although their voices are unintentionally amusing. Also, the scenes of the Silurian Plague spreading through England are some of the best in Doctor Who.
One of the best ever stories.



WOW!

What:The Sands of Time (Missing Adventures novels)
By:Admiral, Perth, Australia
Date:Friday 10 March 2006
Rating:   10

It's funny how even though the Doctor can move in time, there are very few stories that use time travel to tell a story out of it's chronological order. For that alone, "Sands of Time" would stand out as a great Doctor Who novel. However, there's more than that to make this novel one of the best Doctor Who novels I ever read.

This book is chilling and complex. The Osirians take on more of a role in this story without becoming too much and losing their mysteriousness. The characters are brilliant. The High Priest commits the actions that start the whole story in motion based on one word from the condemned woman. The chilling part is when you are finally told what that word is. A writer can try to be chilling by using zombies and mummies and other Hammer monsters but some of the most chilling things can also be the most simple.

This book is a page turner that has you turning back to prior pages to re-read certain sections because what happened is viewed completely differently when you're given more information about the characters and plot.

All in all, my review is one word: WOW!



Just when you think you know what's next

What:The Deviant Strain (BBC New Series Adventures novels)
By:Admiral, Perth, Australia
Date:Friday 10 March 2006
Rating:   10

The new series of Dr Who books tends to be a "water-down" version of the Virgin / old series BBC / 8th Doctor BBC books. understandalby since they're written for younger readers. Therefore, it's extremely enjoyable when a writer working in that environment can create a real page turning, which is exactly what Deviant Strain is: a page turner you can't put down.

Justin Richards does a bombardment of surprises in this novel. Therefore, some of them you can see coming (I knew what was waiting in the walled off lab before the Doctor knocked down the wall), and some you don't (when the constable attacks Rose).

You can call some things in this novel cliche' and you can call other parts of it a "run-around" but you can't call this story boring.



More 'Romp' than 'Pomp'

What:Other Lives (Big Finish: The Monthly Adventures)
By:David Yates, Reading, Berkshire
Date:Monday 6 March 2006
Rating:   7

I had a lovely time listening to this. I was just in the right mood.

It was a very enjoyable run-around that didn’t take itself too seriously.

It had a nice a lightness of touch that could so easily have turned into over earnestness, but didn’t. Though some of the plotting was a wee bit contrived – mistaken identities, freak shows, I didn’t care because it was such good fun and ultimately in the spirit of the piece.

I’d also like to single out the sound design and score. They really were spectacular. Lovely music and effects that really put you right in the middle of the action.

Though some of it just seemed down right silly. For reasons I’m finding it hard to pin down at the moment, I felt that it all seemed to work within the whole light-hearted tone of the play.

It had more ‘romp’ than ‘pomp’. Um, if you know what I mean.



A 9 are you crazy

What:Zagreus (Big Finish: The Monthly Adventures)
By:Lee, Rogersville, TN
Date:Saturday 4 March 2006
Rating:   1

This is utter trash. BF should be ashamed to have released a CD this bad. This story is too cerebral, for whom, a 1-year-old monkey?



Bloody Amazing...

What:Spiral Scratch (BBC Past Doctor novels)
By:Eddie Wilkins, Cheltenham, Glos.
Date:Wednesday 1 March 2006
Rating:   8

Warning spoilers!

This book is amazing, written by one of my favourite authors, I highly reccomend this book for those of you who were disappointed with the rushed regeneration of 'Time And The Rani', then you'll like this! THe Sixth Doctor gets his perfect final story, having come across as brash and arrogant throughout his reign, he makes the ultimate sacrifice.

This book is also good because it settles once and for all where all the different companions exist in the doctor who universe, as well as a doctor who could have very well triumphed over the Valeyard.

If I have any bad points, I must say that the other characters, Doctors and Mels aside, aren't really fleshed out so you can connect with them. The threat, however, a creature that can eat time, or something, is for once very credible.

This is myfirst review, and I haven't read it in a while so don't rely on this. I'll say one thing though:

Bloody Fantastic!



The Vanishing Point

What:Vanishing Point (BBC Eighth Doctor novels)
By:the Traveller, a world "where death has meaning"
Date:Saturday 25 February 2006
Rating:   7

Not the most enjoyable EDA, but still a well- written, solid adventure.



Average

What:Time-Flight (Target novelisations)
By:the Traveller, Kalid's Chamber
Date:Saturday 25 February 2006
Rating:   5

A very average, straight from the script novelisation which is just as flawed as the televised version and adds nothing new to the story.



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