Monday, November 23, 2015

Timewyrm: Revelation by: Paul Cornell: And they descended into Hell

After I struggled to remember what happened in the end of Timewyrm: Apocalypse, Paul Cornell’s debut novel, Timewyrm: Revelation, proves to be quite the opposite of Apocalypse living up to expectations set in the other Timewyrm novels.  What first strikes the reader is the cover seeing the Doctor dance with Death on the Moon while an astronaut looks on and a church is in the background.  An odd image to be sure, but not nearly as surreal as the novel gets.  The novel is first and foremost an introspection of the mind of the Doctor and we get to see much of the way that the other Doctors are seen except for the Second Doctor, who got his time to shine in Timewyrm: Apocalpyse, and the Sixth Doctor who I theorize actually scares the Seventh Doctor.  The way the Doctor sees his other selves fit perfectly with the First Doctor as the Librarian searching for a daisy, the Third Doctor the owner of a fortress and almost a mistake, and the Fourth Doctor as a ferryman who knows more than he lets on.  The most interesting aspect of this is how the Fifth Doctor is seen, as the conscience who has been trapped in the Pit.  He is the most integral to the plot as to escape his mind Ace must free the conscience after facing every death the Doctor caused.  Each death is given gravity even when Katarina appears as Cornell could easily have made her death desensitized.

 

The plot itself is also very engaging with the Doctor and Ace arriving in the village of Cheldon Bonniface to confront the Timewyrm for the last time.  Before long they are whisked off to the moon along with a sentient church, an aged vicar, a married couple and their child, and a child that in a divergent timeline killed Ace as a child.  This is where everything gets surreal as before the exploration of the Doctor’s mind, Ace must overcome her own problems and we get to see a lot of her childhood.  We see how she could have become incredibly vapid and not nearly as strong a person as she was.  We see her relationship with Manisha, her friend mentioned in Ghost Light who died when her house was firebombed by Neo-Nazis.  We see Ace’s mother and some of her other friends last seen in Survival and we also see Ace go to The Curse of Fenric length emotions over the Doctor.  While she isn’t completely upset with him, here she is angry for his failed master plan.  We get to see Chad Boyle, the astronaut on the cover who nearly killed Ace with a brick as a child.

 

Chad is a really sympathetic villain as we eventually learn what this timeline’s version did turn out to be.  He turned into someone who had an ordinary life unlike this Chad who had been enticed by his “Angel” aka the Timewyrm since a young age.  He is every petulant child and even the Timewyrm can’t always put up with him.  The other characters are a bit of a negative as the married couple, Peter and Emily Hutchings, are a bit bland.  Peter suffers the most as at least Emily is a strong independent woman.  They are only there to conclude the plot.  The vicar is a bit bland as well, but Saul is extremely interesting.  Saul is the sentient church who is pretty much a less depressed and churchier version of Marvin the Paranoid Android from The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.   The Timewyrm is also brilliantly written here as the intimidating villain and although the ending is a touch of a cop out, she has a great presence.  All in all I give Timewyrm: Revelation a 95/100 and recommend it to anyone.

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