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https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/emotional-chemistry-by-simon-forward/

Part of it is set in the year 2024 in Russia, where the Doctor’s companion Fitz Kreiner finds himself isolated while the Doctor and the other companion Trix McMillan zoom off to the year 5000 and to 1812 respectively. To be honest there is little here to differentiate the Russia of 2024 from the Russia of 2002 when the book was written, and if it weren’t for the back cover explicitly mentioning 2024 you would tend to think it was set in or very soon after the year of publication. I’m afraid I was not terribly excited by the plot, with a McGuffin and a time-travelling entity looking for it, but there are some pleasing references to Magnus Greel from The Talons of Weng-Chiang.
 
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nwhyte | Feb 24, 2024 |
https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/the-lost-skin-by-andy-frankham-allen-scary-monst...

Perhaps my concentration was weak while on holiday, but I found this rather confusing and not all that interesting. The Brigadier and friends jump all along their own timelines, including alternative timelines, and it did not make a lot of sense for me.
 
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nwhyte | Oct 23, 2022 |
Very faithful to the series episode, with great little tidbits of additional information and insight, that only reading the story can really give you.
 
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Lizzerbeth | Jun 23, 2022 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3786061.html

Three short and punchy short stories, which landed slightly wrong for me because I should have read them after the next novel in the sequence, Mind of Stone, which they are set after rather than before. (I read the anthology first because it was published first. Silly me.)
 
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nwhyte | Oct 24, 2021 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3769111.html

I'm greatly enjoying these set of adventures of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart set just before the arrival of the Third Doctor into his life. Here he is sent off to the Aegean Sea to investigate mysterious threats, with his usual crew of assistants (who all get something to do) and an eccentric archaeologist and a Soviet officer who becomes a reluctant ally, along with a ruthless South African baddie. It fairly cracks along and I enjoyed it. Forward wrote one of the first Doctor Who books I read this century, before the 2005 reboot, and I've liked his work more often than not; this one's certainly in the "more" category.½
 
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nwhyte | Sep 25, 2021 |
Originally posted here at Anime Radius.

Companions on Doctor Who, when it comes to their first outing in the TARDIS, never get an easy ride: Tegan is forced to carry a post-regenerated Doctor around a strange planet; Charley Pollard faced down Cybermen while Ace smashed the hell out of Daleks with a baseball bat. Seems only fair that everyone’s favorite male nurse from the near future, Thomas Hector Schofield, should get the same treatment. With a giant chunk of Australia floating through space on a meteor, filled with ghosts and stone people and dangerous monsters round every corner, Dreamtime certainly succeeds in introducing Hex to the wild and wonderful universe that awaits him in future travels.

The story itself is very spooky and beautiful in a way. It’s obvious how much time and research Simon A. Forward put into the backstory of the Dreamtime, a concept which itself originates from Aboriginal mythology. The Galyari themselves actually originate from a previous Big Finish audio, but you don’t need to listen to it to understand their part of the story. I wish I could say that the story itself made sense overall, but a lot of it went over my head and seemed overly complicated at some points. The opening scene, however, is utterly brilliant and a great way to pull in listeners – by throwing them head first into an unknown situation, get them interested, then jump to a seemingly unrelated setting shortly afterward. I also thought the switches between past and future (present?) were handled deftly and at no time did I feel confused or put off by any of the time jumps in the narrative.

It is important to note that this is Hex’s first trip in the TARDIS, which means this story also includes his first encounter with a new world, an alien species, and dangers unlike anything back home. He does so admirably, approaching everything with a sense of awe and wonder but not so much that he loses sight of what’s going on. He feels a bit odd being called upon to bring the Doctor out of the Dreamtime, rightfully thinking that Ace would be a better candidate as she knows him better, but despite all odds Hex does a fine job of helping solve the mystery of the Dreaming and saving the Doctor from the void. Ace, older and wiser since her appearance on the TV, becomes Hex’s mentor in time travel, having done it herself for quite some time. The Doctor is still playing professor for his companions, leading them through the alien world like a teacher on a field trip – well, that is, until he gets snatched up by the void and Ace and Hex have to fend for themselves.

Another something worth noting: the Doctor. Sylvester McCoy once again does a bang-up job as his respective Doctor, and the script gives him opportunity to be the wonderfully dark alien from season 26 that this reviewer enjoyed watching so much. When he plays the Not!Doctor who tries to trick Ace and ends up trying to kill her instead, he is so delightfully creepy that I almost which they had let the Not!Doctor have more scenes. He delivers one of the most memorable lines in the story – “It’s a choice between the devil and the deep blue sea” – and his Doctor’s return from the Dreamtime is a subtle and understated victory for fans who like their Time Lords a little bit devious and not afraid to muck about in the time stream.

As an audioplay, Dreamtime delivers on all fronts. A combination of a great soundtrack and a fully competent cast creates an atmosphere that is both frightening yet interesting. The world of Oz on a rock is one which draws the listener in and entices with its tales of ghosts and stone people. Yes, some of it doesn’t make sense, but once you let go and allow the play to wash over you with its cold charm and non-linear story techniques, you’ll find yourself enjoying it despite its flaws. Also, if this is how Hex is as a companion, I look forward to listening to his following adventures in the TARDIS. As the Doctor said, they’ll make a seasoned time traveler out of him yet.
 
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sarahlh | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 6, 2021 |
Professor Bernice Summerfield and the Bone of Contention is the sixth Bernice Summerfield audio drama in a row to feature a “monster,” but like The Grel Escape before it, Bone of Contention switches things up by not featuring a monster that appeared in the classic Doctor Who television series. Rather, The Bone of Contention features one of the alien races Big Finish created itself: the Galyari, who previously appeared in The Sandman with the Sixth Doctor and Evelyn. Bone of Contention is even written by Simon A. Forward, who created the Galyari for The Sandman.

Bone of Conention sees Bernice hired by the Perlorans to visit the Clutch, a convoy of ships traversing interstellar space, on their behalf to recover a precious artefact from the Galyari. Of course, the Galyari claim to not have the artefact, and Bernice soon ends up sidetracked by Griko, the deformed son of Commander Korschal of the Security Directorate. In a move that surprises no one that has ever experienced another Bernice Summerfield story, the plight of Griko turns out to be related to the artefact, and Bernice is quickly brought into conflict with the Galyari.

Read the rest of this review at Unreality SF.
 
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Stevil2001 | May 21, 2012 |
In this Fourth Doctor adventure, the TARDIS takes the Doctor and Leela to wintry New Hampshire where various parties are interested in something extraterrestial that seems to have a connection with weather, spreading blizzards and ice everywhere. With so many characters and groupings involved, it took me quite a while to remember who was who although I was able to get on with the book in large chunks. Leela didn't get much space to shine - she was in the story someone who was very much out of her element and needed looking after, although she seemed to regain her spirits towards the end.
 
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mari_reads | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 2, 2009 |
In brief: Don't waste your time with Drift unless you think you would really enjoy a banal X-Files knock-off mixed with a banal soap opera knock-off.

A real shame, because I was looking forward to this book. Again, I've been stupidly found guilty of judging a book by its cover, but we can't help ourselves sometimes, can we? It's a human mistake, one that everyone seems to make from time to time. I was ensnared by the cover art of Drift, believing I would receive a moody or atmospheric piece intertwined with a fair amount of sci-fi/horror flair. And what did I get instead, besides a headache? A shitty suburban soap opera mixed in with some 'aliens vs. the military' type bologna that wouldn't even cut it in those low budget made-for-TV movies they show on the Sci-Fi Channel every Saturday. The only thing going for Drift, and the only reason I don't give it a zero outright, is that it's readable, so at least the torment will be over soon enough should you make the grave error of picking this book up.

The plot involves the Doctor and Leela landing in contemporary New Hampshire during an epic Thanksgiving blizzard. The Doctor immediately stumbles into a covert search operation being handled by White Shadow, a vaguely Torchwood-type unit that hunts down alien tech and salvages it for study and possible future use by mankind. In this case, White Shadow is seeking the wreckage from a military jet, the contents of which are also of particular interest to a pair of CIA agents in town and some batshit cultists. The Doctor, still using his credentials as UNIT's scientific adviser, attaches himself to White Shadow and joins in on the investigation, believing the snow storm is much more than just aberrant weather.

This all sounds like a really great set-up, but let me backtrack a little first and discuss all the pointless domestic drama. Before this, we're introduced to the local sheriff, a vanilla bumpkin by the name of Mackenzie. We are also introduced to Mackenzie's girlfriend, the completely frigid and unlikeable Martha, her annoying daughter Amber, and Amber's wayward drunk of a father Curt, who is driving back home to see his little girl on Thanksgiving (with all sorts of Thanksgiving 'presents' to give to Amber, because, you know, Americans exchange gifts on Thanksgiving... huhh???). Domestic drama! Martha doesn't want Curt to come anywhere near their daughter, because he's a bad influence, and Mackenzie has been having thoughts about another woman, his policewoman partner, who later goes missing in the snowstorm. Domestic drama! Oh, and we also discover shortly after that Mackenzie just happens to be the brother of Morgan, White Shadow's leader, which leads to... you guessed it, more domestic drama! Nevermind the fact that I've watched much better daytime soaps before, but this romance novel fodder has absolutely no place in a Who novel. It's not even on the same level as Dark Shadows, which I might be able to accept if it was shoehorned into a Doctor Who story. When the idea for original Doctor Who novels was initially proposed, the famous quip of "stories too broad and deep for the small screen" surely didn't include THIS.

The Doctor spends large chunks of the book on the sidelines, and Leela - poor Leela - may as well not even be listed as a character she gets so little time devoted to her (she's paired off with a Native American psychic named Krystal Owl Eye Wildcat, who essentially replaces Leela in the 'noble savage' role for 95% of the novel). This means that part of the story follows the exploits of the one-dimensional military folk, and the other half of the plot is propelled by the two aforementioned secret agents, Mulder and Scully, I mean... Melody Quartararo and Parker Theroux. Yes, I'm serious. Those are really their names. Simon A. Forward comes across as the anti-Douglas Adams in the name game department. Adams would often come up with silly, irreverent, yet memorable names for his characters. And then there's Forward, who will just annoy you with stupid, highly unlikely character names. Irving Pydych? Michaela Zabala?! Dermot Beard?!?!

The absolute worst thing about Drift, the thing that will give you those little uncontrollable urges to chuck the book across the room, burn it, or run it over with a car, is the horrific attempts at Americanization by the author. As I understand it, Simon A. Forward is from Cornwall, and while Cornwall might very well be the English equivalent of the Deep South, hailing from there does not mean you are automatically an expert on how people live in the States. It's like when an American tries to write something set in the UK without having a clue about the place and they force every single character to say "Cheerio!" and "Pip-pip!" whilst twirling their bowler hats on top of double decker buses and drinking cups of tea. Forward's Little Town, USA features many of the tired backwater stereotypes: everyone drives a truck, everyone owns a gun, everyone swears a lot, everyone drinks Jack Daniels and wears sunglasses and hates the rest of the world. Blah, blah, blah. And the effort to include American vernacular in the dialogue is even more jarring than those stereotypes. I feel the author should have either completely forsaken any attempt to make the dialogue 'realistic' (because the half-American/half-English speech just doesn't work), or set the contemporary story in a setting he was intimately familiar with, because the author's version of modern America comes across as a bastard child of Stephen King novels and CNN.

Dire... even by TV tie-in standards.½
1 abstimmen
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OrkCaptain | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 17, 2009 |
I bought only four of Telos Books' fifteen Doctor Who novellas during their original run, so I was quite pleased to find this in a Kansas used bookstore. It was decent: the sixth Doctor and Peri land on a mysterious planet, there's an explosion, they get separated and each fall in with a different lot. So, not super-original, but it had some good touches. As well as some predictable ones. The Doctor doesn't always feel right-- he's a little slow on the uptake, not rising to the defense of the crab people as quickly as one might want. The crab people being, of course, the coolest part of the book, adaptable soldiers in a war being fought years after it should have ended (see what I mean by predictable?), all with distinct personalities, especially Scrounger. Peri is, as usual, put through a ridiculously over-the-top traumatic experience. One cannot see why she would wish to travel in the TARDIS, and suspects that she should be pretty psychologically damaged as a result of them. Has anything nice ever happened to that girl?
 
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Stevil2001 | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 5, 2008 |
http://nhw.livejournal.com/1014841.html#cutid6

Drift seems to have escaped from the X-Files. Here we have a US special forces military operation in a snowbound New Hampshire village, which the Doctor and Leela get embroiled in. There are also two CIA agents (which is a mistake; they should be FBI) on the case with their own secret. There's some great characterisation of a dysfunctional family (though not really of the Doctor or Leela), and lots of people get killed, yet at the end of the book one feels that not an awful lot has happened. The cold snowbound setting is reminiscent of Kim Newman's Time and Relative, which was apparently published almost simultaneously.½
 
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nwhyte | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 19, 2008 |
Dreamtime is the first trip in the Tardis for the Seventh Doctor's new companion Hex: some splendid audio-scapes conveying the double weirdness of the landscape - Uluru is bizarre enough in the first place, but to find it on an atmospheric asteroid is extra value. I'm not sure if the plot really made a lot of sense but I enjoyed the ride.½
 
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nwhyte | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 16, 2008 |
This is another of those Doctor-returns-to-the-scene-of-a-previous-adventure stories, which generally don't grab me, combined with the Is-the-sixth-Doctor-evil? theme which did so much to blight his years on the programme. Good marks for a complex and detailed alien culture with which the Doctor has to grapple (one of the Galyari is played by Anneke Wills, aka Polly). Poor marks for lots of expository passages and for not really working a plot into the situation. Probably my least favourite Six/Evelyn story so far.½
 
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nwhyte | 1 weitere Rezension | Jan 21, 2008 |
http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/nonfiction/shellshock.htm

This is a good piece, and if all Doctor Who fiction were of this quality the world would be a better place.

The Sixth Doctor and his companion Peri Brown arrive on a deserted warship on an unspecified planet which might be Earth. They get separated when the ship sinks, and the Doctor finds himself playing the role of mentor to a small group of cyborg crabs and their human friend Ranger, survivors of a vaguely (but sufficiently) described horrible war, now marooned on a beach where the mysterious monster Meathook is picking them off one by one. Peri meantime spends most of the book disembodied and trying to regain contact with the Doctor.

The plot jumps between viewpoints and back and forth along its own timeline, and for Scrounger the crab, one of the viewpoint characters, we switch to the present tense. This mimicks the effects of Ranger's shell shock, as a result of which he looks "at the world as through a splintered lens". It's a difficult trick to pull off but it's done effectively. The insane Ranger and non-human Scrounger make effective viewpoint characters.

We gradually build up a picture of Ranger's motivations and his real relationship with the crabs, Meathook, and the disembodied intelligence which takes Peri under its wing. Scrounger is an engaging cyborg whose story ends on a note of triumph. Peri's character also is given some added depth (controversial in fan circles, I understand) which makes her relationship with the Doctor more convincing. I half-recognised elements from China Miéville, Iain M. Banks, and Brian Aldiss, but the combination here is original.

There are a couple of weak points. Because this is Doctor Who fiction, it is a given that for continuity's sake the Doctor and Peri will have survived in more or less one piece at the end, so rather than sympathise with their plight at any stage we tend to wonder how the author will extract them from it. Of course the author can and does compensate by introducing interesting and sympathetic secondary characters such as Ranger and Scrounger who we know are much more expendable.

Also the Doctor of Shell Shock is not very reminiscent of the character played by Colin Baker, forced as he is to be mentor, counsellor and comforter to Ranger and the crabs rather than an unstable zany extrovert. If the point of Doctor Who fiction is to develop the relations between established characters, and explore the nature of the Doctor, then this story cannot be rated a success. On the other hand, if the idea of Doctor Who fiction is to write good sf which has the Doctor and companions as the main characters, then Simon A. Forward can congratulate himself on a job well done.

As with all Telos productions, the book is nicely packaged. There is an introduction by Guy N. Smith, author of horror novels about crabs (which is a bit misleading because the story turns out to be more sf than horror) and the deluxe edition includes a frontispiece by Bob Covington and the autographs of Messrs Covington, Smith and Forward. I still think £10 for a hardback novella (let alone £25 for the deluxe edition) is a bit steep, but these days Telos are far from the only offenders on that point and presumably it's what the market will bear; I guess that waiting for the paperback is not an option in this case.
 
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nwhyte | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 17, 2005 |
Diese Rezension wurde vom Autor verfasst.
It would be poor form for me to say what I think of this book since I wrote it, but other people tell me it's great:

Harper Collins:
"Evil UnLtd is well-written, sharp, witty, and absolutely succeeds in transporting the reader to a curious and lush unknown world. The book avoids much of the self-importance that ruins a lot of science-fiction, and I found your ‘Dr. Evil’ antagonist Dexter Snide and his bumbling antics to be refreshingly comic.
The plot is strong and coupled with your very accessible and extremely clean prose the reader is quickly pulled along by your story."

Rebecca Bilek-Chee, Ed Victor Ltd:
"A number of my colleagues have read your material, and we all agree this is a strong piece"

CJ McKee, Authonomist:
"How fun and well written! I could see this as a continuing series very easily. Your writing is quick-witted, descriptive and visual. I can see the characters and hear the inflections."

Richard P-S, Authonomist:
"We need a successor to the late Douglas Adams and the, alas, fading Terry Pratchett. This looks like it could be a good bet, after the 2 chapters I've read."

Gillian, Authonomist:
"It's clear to see why this is at the top of the charts - it feels original with fresh ideas. Even though I'm not a sci-fi reader (heck, I've never even watched the whole of Star Wars!) I'd definitely buy this if I saw it in a bookshop."

and many many more, as they say on those compilation CD ads.
Diese Rezension wurde von mehreren Benutzern als Missbrauch der Nutzungsbedingungen gekennzeichnet und wird nicht mehr angezeigt (Anzeigen).
 
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4dprefect | Oct 19, 2010 |
Zeige 16 von 16