
Short Trips
as an anthology
release was a success, something that shouldn’t have been a surprise as the three
Decalog installments published by Virgin were quite the success, so
almost immediately another volume was commissioned for release the following
year. Stephen Cole remained editor on
the edition and brought together many of the same authors, plus a few surprises
but decided to ditch Short Trips’ original theme of trips in history in
favor of letting the authors explore whatever aspect of short fiction they
desire. This means the book was
published under the name More Short Trips, being the only prose volume
to not really have a central theme, the follow up would be Short Trips and
Side Steps before the short fiction would be handed over to Big Finish Productions
to publish through several themed Short Trips anthologies. This is a double-edged sword, leading to stories
of all sorts with no limitation outside of having the Doctor involved (though
for one this actually includes an unspecified future Doctor unique to these
anthologies).
Stephen
Cole once again takes the opening of the collection on himself, writing “Totem”
under the name Tara Samms and as an opening it’s the bad edge of the double-edged
sword. It’s one of the Eighth Doctor
stories for the anthology and is quite weak as an opener. It’s only about eight pages long and Cole
doesn’t actually do much with those eight pages, it wants to largely be a character
piece musing on loss and grief, but Cole’s prose is rather simplistic making it
come across as unemotional, and there isn’t nearly enough to make things
work. There’s the germ of an interesting
idea here but it really needed to be in the hands of a different author to
really work. 4/10.
Cole then
follows up with a story from a debut author, Ian Atkins, who would go on to
write several Short Trips for Big Finish Productions, as well as serving as the
range’s producer after the unfortunate passing of Paul Spragg. “Scientific Adviser” fares far better as a
story than “Totem”, mainly because it is a fun romp that explores some of the
cover-ups put in place after various invasions that were handled by UNIT. Unlike the novel Who Killed Kennedy? which
serves far more as a deconstruction and examination of the era as well as
integrating Doctor Who into history, “Scientific Adviser” feels like a
writer having a lot of fun in terms of getting around the central premise, the
cover up is that a film is being made of The Invasion and the Second
Doctor, travelling alone likely post-The War Games, has been recruited
as scientific adviser, reporting to the Brigadier in between takes and changing
the script to make it ever so slightly inaccurate. As a story it’s quite fun and is all building
to the reveal that the Cybermen have been secretly behind the film, kidnapping
the director’s daughter briefly and returning her to get a foot in the door on
the filmmaking process. The climax of
the short story is clever enough, if a bit of an anti-climax and a lot of the
ending feels like it’s meant to hint towards the Doctor eventually fulfilling
his exile on Earth, though the setting of “Scientific Advisor” being the then-present
of the 1990s just adds to the weirdness of the UNIT Dating Controversy. Still a very fun time and Atkins as a writer
shows quite a bit of promise, shame he’s really only done short stories. 7/10.
Next is
another incredibly short story “Missing, Part One: Business as Usual” by: Gary
Russell, the short premise being Mel gets back to Earth. Russell, having written for Mel in Business
Unusual characterizes her well and this is a fine little snippet, but that’s
all it is a snippet. 6/10. Mike Tucker and Robert Perry write “Missing,
Part Two: Message in a Bottle” which is even shorter than “Missing, Part One:
Business as Usual”, quite literally just being the message in a bottle thrown
into space for the Doctor. It’s just as
fine a little snippet. 6/10.
Dave Stone
is a writer I’m always very mixed on and “Moon Graffiti” is just a Dave Stone
story that doesn’t work for me. Now,
before I go into detail, this is one that may work well for someone who is a
Dave Stone fan, it has all the hallmarks of his work. The prose is incredibly dense and the ideas
surrounding it are largely in the absurd, though the short story format feels incredibly
limiting for an author who even in novel format feels limited. It’s also very possible that this story works
better when performed by Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant as it was originally
released about six months before the publication of More Short Trips in
the audio anthology Out of the Darkness.
The concept is just as absurd as you’d expect from stone, the setting is
a desolate Earth in the far future and the Sixth Doctor and Peri have to fight
off the Pararachnid alien threat, with several supporting characters along the
way while there is another group of aliens stranded on Earth called the
Wibliwee, plus a third group called the Monitors. Again this is too convoluted for a short
story, even with Stone making the story one of the longer ones, but so much of
it feels like it’s mean to be read by Baker and Bryant. Reading it makes it quite difficult to take
in everything that is being said, but I can easily imagine hearing it makes it
feel more like you’re listening to an audio drama or being told an actual story,
it just didn’t work for me in this format.
4/10.
“One Bad
Apple” didn’t really come at a great time for me to actually read. I ended up reading it not long after
relistening to Simon A. Forward’s The Sandman and like The Sandman,
this is a story that has a lot of the problems associated with his work. “One Bad Apple” is an allegory for the Book
of Genesis, specifically the creation, the fall of man, and the story of Cain
and Abel. This all sounds like an
interesting setup for a Doctor Who story, but Forward doesn’t actually
ever do anything interesting with it, just keeping the Biblical allusions and
having them play out as you would expect.
That and Forward really likes to add in references to other pieces of Doctor
Who to try and make things bigger than they are, specifically the Cybermen
and the Cyber Wars are extensively referenced in the story. The actual fruit is used as this almost
infection, Leela opening the story by eating it yet for her it never actually
feels like a problem for her though it is for the supporting characters. The ending is suitably dramatic and that
saves this from being a particularly bad story, but it’s also one I could see
myself disliking more on reread which isn’t a good sign (it happened with The
Sandman). 6/10.
Just as
the worry was setting in that More Short Trips would be significantly
weaker a collection than the original Short Trips, Gary Russell’s “64
Carlysle Street” comes to make a great little historical piece. Russell clearly understands how to use the
team of the Doctor, Steven, and Dodo, and that is to present them all as mischievous
as they were in The Gunfighters, slowly integrating themselves in the
title household: the Doctor by invitation, Dodo as a maid who can’t keep her
mouth shut and really isn’t fit for being in service, and Steven as the
eccentric chauffeur for the Doctor. That
takes up just enough time before the story shifts into one essentially about
possession and exorcism which shouldn’t really work for the TARDIS team Russell
is using, but it reads far closer to the hypnosis in The War Machines
than say The Exorcist, leaving us with this great little story to shift the
collection. 8/10.
This
quality turns into a streak with Steve Lyons’ “The Eternity Contract”, the
Fifth Doctor and Nyssa story for the volume, and like Short Trips, it’s
one of the highlights. This is a story exploring
the concept of death through a surreal setting, this time a house eternally
caught in a storm. The story starts with
someone dying in a car crash and the Doctor and Nyssa on a completely different
planet being attacked by an alien wolf, and all ending up at this house where
they are informed they are dead. The rest
of the story is Steve Lyons’ musing on the various ways people can find
themselves dead, and the setting of a halfway house for the dead clearly has its
roots in other pieces of fiction but he uses it very carefully. The Doctor and Nyssa are the only two who both
refuse to take their scenario at face value and have the potential know how to
escape and uncover just what is actually happening here. The eventual reveal is one that is far closer
to something published by Virgin, the master of the house Nicholas Carnon made
a deal with Death, yes that Death, to borrow six souls for his own purposes,
those that he replaces every so often whenever he gets bored. It’s quite a cruel scenario but it also allows
Lyons to slowly dig into how the Doctor and Nyssa are after the death of Adric
and make this story a celebration of life and death as part of the natural
order of things. 9/10.
Mike
Tucker and Robert Perry writing something not for the Seventh Doctor and Ace honestly
feels kind of odd, made even weirder by the fact that they make “The Sow in Rut”
a sequel to K9 and Company, with a dash of the vibes of The Daemons
thrown in for good measure. It’s Sarah
Jane Smith’s story through and through and is honestly a fairly good time,
complete with witches and demon pigs, but the ending feels like another
anti-climax and tries to hint that some of the supernatural wasn’t supernatural
at all which brings the story down slightly.
7/10.
I’ve often
said that Paul Leonard is a writer who does brilliant work until he has to get
to an ending of a story, then the ball is dropped. It’s always nice when he is able to prove me
wrong as he did with “Special Weapons”.
Leonard placing the Seventh Doctor and Mel in the middle of World War II
while the Nazi’s are working on several experiments on an alien being to isolate
a small British town, holding the residents hostage and terrorizing them. That’s just the surface level, for much of
the story the Doctor and Mel are actually split up and Mel is paired with young
Oliver, an adolescent who ends the story traumatized but determined to go off
to war in the next year to kill Germans.
It’s difficult to describe just how tragic that ending feels, he is
going off to kill Nazis after all, but even doing that means he will come back
a changed man. This is also a story that
despite the reader knowing that the Doctor and Mel must make it out alright,
the tension is some of the thickest I’ve ever seen in Doctor Who, making
it a very nice companion piece to Lance Parkin’s Just War which was
being adapted to audio around this time.
10/10.
“Honest
Living” is another story from a first time writer and like Ian Atkins before
him, Jason Loborik actually tells a fairly engaging little Third Doctor
romp. Loborik, clearly a fan of Day
of the Daleks uses the story to play around in that space with the original
pitch idea of changing around history.
This becomes a story where there are two timelines, one where a man is
killed in a car accident and one where he survives. It’s quite surprising that there are some
plot similarities to “Father’s Day”, though as this is not as good considering
it’s just a side character dealing with changing history and not the companion,
in this story that would be either Jo or the Brigadier. Still it’s quite fun and Jon Pertwee’s Third
Doctor is captured quite well especially for the early Season 9 setting of the
story. 7/10.
Like “Moon
Graffiti”, “Dead Time” had its initial release in an audio anthology, Earth
and Beyond read by Paul McGann, though unlike “Moon Graffiti”, this isn’t
one of those stories that suffers from being in prose and not read aloud. It does suffer from having to use Sam Jones
as a companion though, as the story while set in the TARDIS and in a void like
setting so Andrew Miller really focuses in on the Doctor/companion
dynamic. Except the Doctor/companion
dynamic between the Eighth Doctor and Sam is a particularly weak one. “Dead Time” is a story that also focuses on
the Doctor as a character, locking some cosmic entity in his own mind’s past that
is straight out of Gallifrey’s past as well.
The story would work better had there not been a companion included in
the proceedings and we could just focus on how the Eighth Doctor integrates
with Gallifrey’s past, especially considering this collection came out post-Alien
Bodies (and directly would be the first time using Gallifrey proper since Lungbarrow). Still Miller writes a solid story. 7/10.
I’d like
to say it’s odd that David A. McIntee’s contribution to More Short Trips
is quite literally a smallish piece exploring what happens to the Doctor, Ian,
Barbara, and Vicki in between scenes of “The Slave Traders”, but seeing as “Romans
Cutaway” is both a pure historical giving two little plot threads to the Doctor
and Vicki and Ian and Barbara respectively while focusing on who these
characters are at their core. It’s a
classic setup from McIntee with a TARDIS team he clearly adores to bits, giving
so much insight into Vicki as a character immediately post-The Rescue. On television while she was characterized well
and particularly well performed by Maureen O’Brien, “Romans Cutaway” really
wants to explore her emotions post-The Rescue with this understated fear
of abandonment after the death of her father and her decision to travel in the
TARDIS. Ian also gets some particularly
nice moments remembering people he knew on Earth who died tragically. He also gets to fight a lion and McIntee keeps
the tone of The Romans intact despite going down some darker paths. 8/10.
“Return of
the Spiders” is Gareth Roberts’ love letter to Planet of the Spiders,
doing a sequel set squarely within Season 17, the era of Doctor Who he
is best at writing. You’d think this
makes for a brilliant story like the likes of The Romance of Crime, The
English Way of Death, or The Well-Mannered War, but “Return of the Spiders”
is fine. Roberts is great at getting the
Doctor and Romana’s characterization and banter down to an exact science which
makes it bearable, but he is taking the piss out of the spiders too much meaning
this feels like a reinvention that is disrespectful to the thematic end of the Third
Doctor in a way bringing the story down.
It also takes way too long to reveal the spiders. 6/10.
Christopher
Bulis writing for the Fifth Doctor and Peri already led to The Ultimate Treasure
which is one of the early Past Doctor Adventures that is squarely a miss in
terms of a story. “Hot Ice” fares
better, but doesn’t fare particularly well.
It’s a story that is just kind of there, the Doctor and Peri are
actually quite well characterized but it’s also the second time Bulis has
written a story that feels like the first time Peri is taking a trip in the
TARDIS. This is particularly messy of as
tory and ends very much with a Warriors of the Deep style there should
have been another way that feels somehow less earned. 5/10.
“uPVC” is
an unknown writer, Paul Farnsworth, who writes a near perfect examination of
who the Doctor is through both the Second and Seventh Doctors and a window
salesman. That’s all I’m going to say
because this is a story that nearly brought me to tears. 9/10.
Peter
Anghelides’ “Good Companions” is honestly a weird little story, it’s the one
that features an unspecified future Doctor traveling with a companion called
Anna, his housekeeper. This is a story that
also is told through the framing of an older Tegan Jovanka, married and widowed,
having written up this encounter in Good Companions. A lot of the appeal of this short story is the
future Doctor, an incarnation entirely down to Anghelides who sadly feels a bit
generic. Unlike say The Infinity
Doctors or the Merlin Doctor, this Doctor is more a composite of other Doctor’s
traits up to that point, though there’s certainly room for development since
Anghelides does use this Doctor in multiple Short Trips. The big problem for me is actually the
characterization of Tegan: she’s a bit too mellow in her old age that makes her
feel more a generic companion, Anghelides not really reflecting on her exit in Resurrection
of the Daleks or Adric’s death in Earthshock or the death of her
Aunt Vanessa in Logopolis. It
honestly feels like she could have been any female companion who was left on Earth,
leaving “Good Companions” more “Meh Companions”. 5/10.
After the
success of “Old Flames” and The Scarlet Empress, Paul Magrs closes More
Short Trips with “Femme Fatale”, an adventure for the Doctor, Sam, and Iris
meeting Andy Warhol. Oddly enough this
is one of the ‘weaker’ Magrs stories, it lacks a lot of the depth that his
novels do. It is just as fun as “Old
Flames”, if not slightly more so with the 1930s and 1960s period settings and
the use of Andy Warhol as a character, though not by much as while Magrs is
certainly one of the better writers when it comes to the use of Sam Jones, she
is still Sam Jones. This is also a story
about the assassination attempt on Warhol by Valerie Solanis which has the
typical Magrs twist, though I’m not entirely sure on how much I like the way it’s
presented here, it reeks of an inexperienced writer not quite thinking through
the implications. “Femme Fatale” is
still a great little story because Paul Magrs is almost incapable of doing a
bad story. 7/10.
Overall,
despite More Short Trips ditching the theme meaning that you lose an
interconnectedness of the stories, even if it is just vaguely thematic,
creating the risk of this being a meandering collection it’s actually a
slightly stronger collection than Short Trips. In terms of the stories it actually has more
stories that are added to my new favorites than the first volume, and despite more
misses, the misses were less severe. 6.8/10.