Perhaps the biggest issue
the Eighth Doctor Adventures has had in its beginnings over the Virgin New
Adventures, is that the Eighth Doctor Adventures were much less wary when it
comes to the use of continuity. The
first novel not to use any previous continuity is the seventh book in the
series, Kursaal. The
Bodysnatchers uses the Zygons and Professor George Litefoot as major
elements in the story, and perhaps this is what is holding the book back from
being amazing. In using the Zygons nearly
every twist Morris executes is broadcast pages before it appears several pages
later. Morris does an excellent job using
his novel to develop the mythology of the Zygons, giving them a planet and an
enemy which caused the destruction of their planet. There’s also the implication that there are
several refugee groups of Zygons which have landed on Earth and have been
manipulating their way into society, though this is left by the end of the
novel ambiguous. Morris succeeds at
making his Zygon characters different from the Zygons of “Terror of the Zygons”,
mainly by playing out a piece on morality between a Zygon who serves as leader
and warlord and a Zygon who leads as a scientist. Tuval, the scientist character, has an
excellent arc going from begrudgingly following her leader, into making her own
decisions and joining the Doctor, Sam, and Litefoot in the fight against her
species. Balaak is a weaker character
overall, essentially being more of your standard shouting villain, which works
well enough for what the novel is, but Morris could have done more with the
character. The climax also needed a bit
more work, as the novel loses steam about forty pages from the end.
The Bodysnatchers
takes a while to get going, the plot of shadowy creatures pitching off people around
a factory owned by a one Nathaniel Seers and a young Skarasen terrorizing
Victorian London works well enough. The
plot is just incredibly predictable with Seers’ daughter, Emmeline, noticing
her father being off and wouldn’t you know it, he’s a Zygon in human form. Emmeline for the first half of the novel serves
as an almost companion to the Doctor and honestly she works better as a
character than Sam. Samantha Jones
continues to really only have the characterization of ‘I’m a social activist,
Victorian London needs feminism’ which could work, but it’s just a bit too
cliched for anything. By the second half
of the novel Sam gets some time with the Doctor and their clashing about how he
treats her as younger than he should could be interesting, but it just doesn’t
really amount to much of a character. This
is not a fault of Morris as it’s something Dicks, Orman, and Blum have also had
issues with writing Sam. There just
doesn’t seem to be much forethought onto what Sam was supposed to be. Morris is wonderful at characterizing the Eighth
Doctor however, as he feels like he just went through “The TV Movie”. The Doctor is a hopeless romantic, there to
help the damsels in distress and always gives the villains a second chance, and
is willing to let some of the Zygons live.
Litefoot as a character is also well written, and while there isn’t any
indication that Jago & Litefoot occurs,
his appearance here could be inbetween Series 3 or 4, as Jago is in Brighton. He’s a nice addition even without his partner
in investigating infernal instances, so there’s a bit missing here. The novel is an enjoyably traditional romp
through Victorian London from a first time writer. 7/10.
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