Terrance Dicks uses Catastorphea almost as a make up novel for the disaster that was The Eight Doctors. Instead of trailing back through the Doctor’s timeline, Dicks uses this novel to celebrate an era of the show that he loves while not letting the celebration overtake the central plot of the novel. Yes there are plenty of tropes here common in the Pertwee era, but they are all present in the background and do not impede much of the enjoyment of the novel. There is a minor trap where Dicks perhaps has too many subplots going which makes wrapping them up nicely in the end of the novel takes a bit of work, but as always the easy to read prose quickly gets the reader to the point Dicks is attempting to make. There’s a plot about an indigenous cult who has the Doctor as their Messiah figure, commentary on indigenous rights, and the standard political drama as tensions rise. Each of these subplots are in full swing before the Draconians even appear in the novel. Dick’s writing style makes pages fly by and having short chapters keeps the pace up as there are tributes to every cliffhanger making the book difficult to put down. The epilogue of the novel is a chilling final note, not including the Doctor or Jo, but giving insight into the side characters various fates. The Third Doctor is masterfully characterized here from the word go: he’s as suave as ever, puts Jo’s life above his own, and is willing to charm the authorities to get them out of trouble. Dicks also highlights just how many steps ahead the Third Doctor would be as he is correcting for outside influences of other characters.
The Draconian subplot, while always a presence as there is a blockade against them from the beginning of the novel, only comes to a head in the final third of the novel. That final third is perhaps the novel’s most exciting as we see tensions between Draconia and humanity rise up to begin the war which was explored in Frontier in Space. The war itself is one which comes because of the personal interests of the parties involved, a theme Dicks weaves throughout the book. The interest of the young rebels, genuinely wanting a better life for themselves but falling to naiveite of being unable to mobilize. Or the interests of the natives who believe the Doctor is there to save their plight and even the interest of the politicians who only want power. Dicks uses the setting of a jungle planet to full effect with the sweltering heat representing the rising tensions. He can consider himself on his way to redemption from the travesty of The Eight Doctors by writing a celebratory novel full of tropes that still manage to make an excellent read. 8/10.
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