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Slow Decay (Torchwood)

Andy Lane

Slow Decay (Torchwood) Andy Lane Amazon Price: $9.59
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By: Random House UK
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 9 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Weight loss Torchwood style 4 out of 5 stars.
3 of 4 people found this review helpful.

Gwen Cooper relishes investigating the bizarre and the unexplained with the Torchwood team. Unfortunately, the secret nature of her work and the unpredictable hours place a strain on her relationship with boyfriend Rhys. To spice up their sagging sex life, Gwen sneaks a piece of alien technology out of Torchwood. Rhys, also concerned about their relationship, decides to shed a few pounds to make himself more attractive to Gwen and, on the advice of a friend, visits Dr Scotus' weight loss clinic.

I really enjoyed this book. The story, with its several plot threads, is interesting and really moves along. Author Andy Lane does a good job capturing the essence of the characters and the general tone of the show.

While this book isn't for everyone--you need to be familiar with series--any Torchwood fan would probably find reading it a pleasant way to spend an evening.

Editorial Review:

Separate from the government; outside the police, beyond the United Nations; Torchwood sets its own rules. A team of investigators, using alien technology to solve crime - both alien and human. This new British sci-fi crime thriller, created by Russell T. Davies, sees them delve into the unknown. A group of people fighting the impossible. The series stars Captain Jack Harkness, last seen in Doctor Who. This novel is a brand-new Torchwood story.

The Banquo Legacy (Doctor Who)

Justin Richards, Andy Lane

The Banquo Legacy (Doctor Who) Justin Richards, Andy Lane List Price: $6.95
By: Doctor Who Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

A change of pace for the 8th Doctor 3 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

While not as dense and complicated as lots of the other Doctor Who books, this is an interesting mystery set in the late 19th century which begins with Compassion pulling off something that is quite strange and would not be something you'd expect a TARDIS to be able to do! Then she, along with the Doctor and Fitz, are forced to take refuge at Banquo Manor, posing as guests who are scheduled to arrive to witness a scientific demonstration. As the drama at Banquo Manor unfolds, things go from dark to horrific. The most interesting aspect of this story is that it is told from the viewpoints of two of the guests at Banquo, alternating between them from chapter to chapter. We see some events described twice, from two different points of view, and both are ultimately befuddled by the Doctor's involvement.

Editorial Review:

Middletown in 1889 is a small mining village -- but the local mine is about to be closed down. In an attempt to avoid this catastrophe, the owner, Lord Urton built a huge dam across the river to reduce flooding in a promising area of the mine, but to no avail. However, little does he realise that the construction of the dam has disturbed something that was lying dormant in the earth. Something that is now stirring into life... Strange events are afoot, with local deaths that appear to be caused by lightning strikes. Except that the soles of the victims' feet are burned black. It's up to the Doctor to find out what mysterious forces have been unleashed. Perhaps the stranger in town, Nepath, who wants to buy the mine from Lord Urton, can shed some light on the matter...

The Empire of Glass (Doctor Who - the Missing Adventures Series)

Andy Lane

The Empire of Glass (Doctor Who - the Missing Adventures Series) Andy Lane List Price: $5.95
By: London Bridge (Mm)
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

excellent novel that is both history and sci fic 5 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

On one level, this is a historical Doctor Who adventure and a very good one. The author captures the period perfectly and the reader will come away enlightened concerning Venice, Shakespeare, Galileo etc. It is also a very good Sci fic adventure that makes excellent use of the Doctor Who universe. I particularly enjoyed seeing the Sontarans and the references to the other races. The fact that the Daleks and the Cybermen were not invited to Braxitel's conference was a perfect touch. The series never really made good use of the Whoverse that it slowly created-most of the adventures seemed to take place in their own realities but this book effortlessly joins together the many disparate elements. The characterizations of the Doctor and his companions are spot on and the epiloque with Shakespeare and Braxitel is genuinely moving. A real accomplishment that will like the book's "lost Shakespeare plays" will never be truly appreciated because it's "just" a Doctor Who book. Maybe, but it's also a great novel.

All-Consuming Fire (Doctor Who-the New Adventures)

Andy Lane

All-Consuming Fire (Doctor Who-the New Adventures) Andy Lane List Price: $5.95
By: London Bridge (Mm)
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Elementary, my dear Benny 4 out of 5 stars.
6 of 6 people found this review helpful.

What an idea. Putting Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson and chunks of the Lovecraft universe into a Doctor Who book is a concept that seems ripe for disaster. Too many incompatibilities, too many elements to draw on, and a question of where the focus should be. And yet ALL-CONSUMING FIRE manages to be one of my favorite NAs despite the handful of minor flaws that appear. Holmes and Watson are effortlessly inserted into an imaginative Doctor Who story, giving the book a unique flavor. It's a dark and occasionally grim story, but strangely enough it somehow succeeds at being a whole lot of fun.

The tale starts in typical Holmesian fashion. During the beginning, Watson gets to play second fiddle while Holmes makes several detailed (though irrelevant) observations and deductions purely to demonstrate how clever he is. This sort of thing will be very familiar to fans of the Sherlock Holmes stories. Their involvement in this case begins with an important client hiring them to discover the whereabouts of several books that have been stolen from a strange and secretive library. During the course of their investigation, their travels intersect with the path of that mysterious and eccentric gentleman -- the Doctor (portrayed here as alternatively goofy and cynical). The two fictional juggernauts actually interact quite well. I was hugely entertained by their initial meetings; there's a very amusing sequence in which Holmes is totally unable to determine much of the Doctor's origins from telltale bits of dust and dirt. What could have gone so poorly ends up feeling really right.

The trail leads them first to India, and then to an alien world known as Ry'leh. The reactions of the two Victorians as their surroundings become more and more bizarre are handled realistically (or as realistically as possible) without being over the top. The conclusion to the story is satisfying, though the book suffers from having a beginning that is so wonderful that even an extraordinary ending would seem vaguely inadequate.

The story is told primarily from the journals/diaries of Dr. John Watson and Professor Bernice Summerfield. Andy Lane is excellent at recreating Arthur Conan Doyle's prose style without appearing to be doing a mere cut'n'paste job. The process of the investigation of missing books is very much in keeping with the flavor of the Holmes stories. The Library of St. John The Beheaded is a fantastic creation, and its description is pure Holmesian. A wonderful combination of concepts and prose.

The Lovecraftian additions near the conclusion are not quite as well handled as the Holmes portions. I am, of course, not the first reviewer to note this, and I'm afraid that I cannot break with conventional thinking here. Lovecraft succeeded by keeping his baddies just out of the corner of one's eye, where one wasn't quite sure what was there or what was going on. While this story does eventually come up with a good reason why it's breaking with the formula, the explanation doesn't make up for the fact that it simply isn't executed as pleasingly. This portion at times seems as if it was hastily bolted on to the main plot. Apart from some fairly superficial name-checks, the Lovecraft villains could have been almost any great evil.

The first time I read this book, I did feel that Holmes was horribly underused during the later series of events. While rereading the story, I was mentally prepared for this, and to my surprise, Lane didn't quite sideline Holmes as much as I had remembered. The great detective certainly doesn't have the same forceful impact on the story that he does in the beginning, but my memory had only retained the portions dealing with his shock and bewilderment. There are in fact several moments where Holmes does arrive at plot-advancing conclusions despite his unfamiliarity with the environment. On the other hand, Benny does seem to enjoy taking the mickey out of the famous sleuth at times and while those who take the detective very seriously may not be entirely pleased with that approach, I couldn't help but giggle. A slight mocking of Sherlock Holmes, perhaps, but one that allows him to come through the story with his dignity intact.

There are just too many little things that the book does well to mention them all. I was greatly amused by Watson's infatuation with Benny, perfectly in keeping with his enchantment for seemingly all of his female clients. The descriptions of the Holmes style of Victorian London are excellent. The delightful puns and jokes in the chapter titles are delightful, and had me flipping back to the beginning of the chapter after I had read it in order to get the joke. Too many fun things to recommend about this one.

Editorial Review:

Landing in Victorian London, the TARDIS crew is surprised to meet up with Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson.

Decalog 4 Re-Generations: Ten Stories a Thousand Years One Family (Doctor Who (BBC Paperback))

Decalog 4 Re-Generations: Ten Stories a Thousand Years One Family (Doctor Who (BBC Paperback)) List Price: $5.95
By: Virgin Publishing
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

Not Doctor Who But Still a Great Read 3 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

Being the first in the DECALOG series not focusing on DOCTOR WHO I was a bit cautious in my approach to the book. But, all in all, the book was pretty damn good giving a huge insight of the family history of one of the Doctor's better companions,Roz Forrester, from the inset of Earth's space exploration to the future just years after the events of SO VILE A SIN. Well recommended for any sci-fi fans.

Editorial Review:

The fourth in this highly successful series of short story collections, this book follows the family history of the Forresters, some of Doctor Who's most popular New Adventure companions.

Decalog 3 - Consequences: Ten Stories, Seven Doctors, One Chain of Events (Doctor Who)

Decalog 3 - Consequences: Ten Stories, Seven Doctors, One Chain of Events (Doctor Who) List Price: $5.95
By: London Bridge (Mm)
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

The Stories.....The Stories...... 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 2 people found this review helpful.

The third and fianal decalog with the doctor in it. ...And Eternity in a hour is one of those stories that starts well but ends in a bad way. Moving On is a great story with out a doctor but it has sarah and k-9 in it but it is the last k-9 story and ends in surprise. Tarnished Image is one of the best First Doctor stories in the decalogs and it is made in the form of a newspaper articles. Past Reckoning is not a good story. UNITed We Fall is the second best story in this book , the doctor in new york is a nice idea. Aliens and Predators is very bad. Fegory is the second best Gareth Roberts short story and is very good. His Chelonians' are not as good as normal. Ccontinuity Errors is the best and greatest story in all the decalogs. Can not say it all. Timevault is a good fourth doctor story but it fails in the plot. Zeitgeist is not one of craig Hintons' best stories. Again Craig Hinton has done some thing wrong to the TARDIS and the doctor is trying to find it. All in All this is a great book.

Editorial Review:

This book is a collection of ten linked stories featuring all seven Doctors--and spanning all of human history. It follows the successful tradition of the previous two books in the Decalog series.

Lucifer Rising (The New Doctor Who Adventures)

Jim Mortimore, Andy Lane

Lucifer Rising (The New Doctor Who Adventures) Jim Mortimore, Andy Lane List Price: $5.95
By: London Bridge (Mm)
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Two promising writers debut 3 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

The TARDIS arrives in the Lucifer system, where a scientific expedition is about to face the greed of the Intergalactic Mining Corporation. Some secrets from the past of recently returned companion Ace will lead to as many complications as the lost history of the previous inhabitants of Lucifer...

This book sees the debut of two authors who will return to write further books in this series solo. And an interesting debut it is, too...

Drawing extensively on ideas from both the original TV series and the novels, it contains an original story which sets in place a number of features which will form a backbone for the Virgin Doctor Who range. It expands on the idea of the Guild of Adjudicators, members of which will be allies and enemies of the TARDIS crew in both the New and Missing Adventures ranges, and draws together elements that have been used in the past into a more coherent view of the universe.

As well as doing that, the Doctor, Ace and Benny find themselves and a complex and convoluted plot which will add to the tension already existing between them. This particular thread runs for many books, which is a good thing in terms of the depiction of the characters, but can be a little unpleasant for the reader.

If this book has a major flaw, it is that it suffers from being a first novel. It is longer than it might be, and contains some extraneous elements that the authors might have removed without any harm to the book.

However, it is a book that certainly does reveal the potential of the two authors which bore better fruit in their future works.

Original Sin (Doctor Who the New Adventures)

Andy Lane

Original Sin (Doctor Who the New Adventures) Andy Lane List Price: $5.95
By: London Bridge (Mm)
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Original Gangster 4 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

What do you say about the book that does everything? Okay, so maybe "everything" is a bit of an exaggeration. But ORIGINAL SIN instantly became one of my favorites when I first read it, and I'm happy to find that my original opinion survived the book's reread. There's just too much good stuff here not to like it.

Andy Lane creates a lot of future history in this book. I'm not necessarily a fan of world-building; sometimes an author will be so busy creating a setting that they forget to actually have anything happen in it. But Lane fails to fall into that trap. The thirtieth-century Earth of ORIGINAL SIN is detailed, gritty, realistic and fantastically well conveyed. The poor dwell in the undertown, in the shadows of the floating cities of Earth, while the better off live above, but can only visit the floors and levels below their own. The rich can choose to visit and see the poor, but the poor must be separated out from the wealthy. Roaming around the planet are the honor-bound Adjudicators, dispensing justice and trying to keep the world safe as it plunges into madness and terror during the unfolding of the story. The overcities and undertown, taken from a few throwaway mentions in past novelisations, are so fully fleshed out here that the New Adventures could have set dozens of stories in these locations without exhausting the potential.

The characters depicted here are also wonderful creations. I remember reading somewhere at the time of this publication that Chris Cwej and Roz Forrester were not originally intended to be companions, but only became so after the editors saw how well they were turning out. Whether this is true or not, I don't know. But it's easy to see how someone in charge of the line could pick out continuing characters from a novel this rich in realistic and well-drawn people.

But before I overwhelm you with talk of the hardboiled setting and the no-nonsense characters, I must point out that there's a certain whimsy present in the proceedings. The jokes (and there are a number of them) are actually quite funny. There's a wonderful balance between the serious and the amusing. Many books in the Doctor Who range try to be too much of one or the other, but Andy Lane walks this line perfectly. The Doctor and Benny in particular are depicted well, being both intelligent and droll. The grittiness is never overwhelming; anytime the story looks to be taking itself a little too seriously, Lane instantly takes the pomposity out with a clever piece of dialog or a hilarious one-liner.

And I haven't even mentioned the storyline yet. It's actually fairly simple on the surface, but deceptively engaging. There's a lot of standard Doctor Who material here: unsolved murders, a vast conspiracy, an alien menace threatening Earth, people going stark raving mad, etc, etc. But even the stuff we've seen before never feels old or recycled. The plot moves quickly, and my interest never flagged. In the Acknowledgements, Lane mentions that he abandoned the original plot part of the way through and ended up improvising much of what appeared in the final product. All I can say is that he must have taken great notes on the way to the end, because the conclusion is quite good and perfectly logical.

There are just too many great things in this book to give them all the attention they deserve. The extracts from "The Empire Today" (proving that Fox News and CNN will still be around a millennium from now) that open each chapter. The witty banter between the Doctor and his foes. The bizarre names that the alien Hith have given themselves as reminders of their lost past. The fleshing out of the Samurai-like Adjudicators' backstory. The only thing that really irritated me were the constant continuity references that kept popping up all over the place. I really don't mind a sprinkle of them here and there, but there sure seemed to be a hell of a lot of them in this one and I couldn't figure out what purpose they were supposed to serve.

ORIGINAL SIN launched two new companions, and brought back an old enemy for the Doctor to fight. But regardless of the effect that the book had outside of its own covers, it's a seriously good tale in its own right. Andy Lane had quite a task following up the delightful and entertaining ALL-CONSUMING FIRE, but here he proved that he was as skilled at bring the thirtieth-century to life as he was at capturing the nineteenth-century of Sherlock Holmes. Recommended for all Doctor Who fans.

Original Sin (Doctor Who the New Adventures)

Andy Lane

Original Sin (Doctor Who the New Adventures) Andy Lane List Price: $5.95
By: London Bridge (Mm)
Amazon Marketplace: 7 new & used starting at $4.82

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Original Gangster 4 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

What do you say about the book that does everything? Okay, so maybe "everything" is a bit of an exaggeration. But ORIGINAL SIN instantly became one of my favorites when I first read it, and I'm happy to find that my original opinion survived the book's reread. There's just too much good stuff here not to like it.

Andy Lane creates a lot of future history in this book. I'm not necessarily a fan of world-building; sometimes an author will be so busy creating a setting that they forget to actually have anything happen in it. But Lane fails to fall into that trap. The thirtieth-century Earth of ORIGINAL SIN is detailed, gritty, realistic and fantastically well conveyed. The poor dwell in the undertown, in the shadows of the floating cities of Earth, while the better off live above, but can only visit the floors and levels below their own. The rich can choose to visit and see the poor, but the poor must be separated out from the wealthy. Roaming around the planet are the honor-bound Adjudicators, dispensing justice and trying to keep the world safe as it plunges into madness and terror during the unfolding of the story. The overcities and undertown, taken from a few throwaway mentions in past novelisations, are so fully fleshed out here that the New Adventures could have set dozens of stories in these locations without exhausting the potential.

The characters depicted here are also wonderful creations. I remember reading somewhere at the time of this publication that Chris Cwej and Roz Forrester were not originally intended to be companions, but only became so after the editors saw how well they were turning out. Whether this is true or not, I don't know. But it's easy to see how someone in charge of the line could pick out continuing characters from a novel this rich in realistic and well-drawn people.

But before I overwhelm you with talk of the hardboiled setting and the no-nonsense characters, I must point out that there's a certain whimsy present in the proceedings. The jokes (and there are a number of them) are actually quite funny. There's a wonderful balance between the serious and the amusing. Many books in the Doctor Who range try to be too much of one or the other, but Andy Lane walks this line perfectly. The Doctor and Benny in particular are depicted well, being both intelligent and droll. The grittiness is never overwhelming; anytime the story looks to be taking itself a little too seriously, Lane instantly takes the pomposity out with a clever piece of dialog or a hilarious one-liner.

And I haven't even mentioned the storyline yet. It's actually fairly simple on the surface, but deceptively engaging. There's a lot of standard Doctor Who material here: unsolved murders, a vast conspiracy, an alien menace threatening Earth, people going stark raving mad, etc, etc. But even the stuff we've seen before never feels old or recycled. The plot moves quickly, and my interest never flagged. In the Acknowledgements, Lane mentions that he abandoned the original plot part of the way through and ended up improvising much of what appeared in the final product. All I can say is that he must have taken great notes on the way to the end, because the conclusion is quite good and perfectly logical.

There are just too many great things in this book to give them all the attention they deserve. The extracts from "The Empire Today" (proving that Fox News and CNN will still be around a millennium from now) that open each chapter. The witty banter between the Doctor and his foes. The bizarre names that the alien Hith have given themselves as reminders of their lost past. The fleshing out of the Samurai-like Adjudicators' backstory. The only thing that really irritated me were the constant continuity references that kept popping up all over the place. I really don't mind a sprinkle of them here and there, but there sure seemed to be a hell of a lot of them in this one and I couldn't figure out what purpose they were supposed to serve.

ORIGINAL SIN launched two new companions, and brought back an old enemy for the Doctor to fight. But regardless of the effect that the book had outside of its own covers, it's a seriously good tale in its own right. Andy Lane had quite a task following up the delightful and entertaining ALL-CONSUMING FIRE, but here he proved that he was as skilled at bring the thirtieth-century to life as he was at capturing the nineteenth-century of Sherlock Holmes. Recommended for all Doctor Who fans.


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