Daniel O’Mahony is, to say the least, a controversial
author. He wrote two novels for Virgin
Books, both receiving mixed reception. The
first was the New Adventure Falls the Shadow which detractors called
overly violent and ultimately meaningless, however, it is one that I quite
liked for what it attempted to say. The
second is a Missing Adventure featuring the First Doctor and Dodo Chaplet in an
alternate France. The Man in the
Velvet Mask is shorter than Falls the Shadow, but equally dense in
style. O’Mahony’s choice of placement
and TARDIS team is already telling: at this point Dodo is a character who
appeared in 6 stories and only 19 episodes of the show, the third shortest run
of a companion behind Sara Kingdom’s 9 episodes and Katarina’s 5 episodes. She’s a character often regarded as a clone
of Susan and honestly Jackie Lane has already undergone plenty of rather nasty
reviews in regards to what is a rather weak character. It is odd that The Man in the Velvet Mask
would not only choose this team, but not include Steven Taylor who would be a
grounding influence for Dodo. Yet, this
turns to be a stroke of genius from O’Mahony in several regards.
First, O’Mahony writes the First Doctor as a man close
to death. There are several sequences in
the book where the Doctor knows that he is about to die and regenerate for the
first time, and he wants to be alone when it happens. It has never happened to him before, and he
does not know what to expect. On some
deep level the Doctor is scared, something that both Moffat and Davies would
later lift and mangle in Twice Upon a Time and The End of Time,
respectively. He’s separated from his
companion and haunted constantly by the idea that he is going to die, going so
far as to starting the regenerative process at one point in the novel. O’Mahony uses The Reign of Terror as
almost a blueprint to juxtapose what the Doctor has become. The Doctor’s favorite period of history is
the French Revolution and The Man in the Velvet Mask occurs in an
alternate 1804, near the end of what is generally thought of to be the French
Revolution. The Doctor here isn’t amused
or excited, he’s really suffering from an existential crisis. There is this inability for the Doctor to
find the energy to save the day, sure he does in the end, but he’s just really
tired throughout it. O’Mahony’s
characterization feels like an accurate portrayal of what the character is
internalizing as there are lines which would be Hartnellisms and probably
featured, but because the reader sees them through the eyes of the Doctor we
see them as a real mask.
The character of Dodo is also given a lot of life through
O’Mahony’s explorations of her own thoughts and inner struggles. For much of the novel she is with a troupe of
actors performing for the ruler of France, where she has to put on a role. She has this sexual relationship with another
actor, which she uses to take control of her own life and choices, even if this
control will possibly lead to her own death after she leaves the Doctor. She doesn’t have self-esteem or a real idea
of what makes her a good person and O’Mahony makes her perspective fascinating. Dodo feels like she has transcended in this
novel the Susan clone she was and it dovetails into O’Mahony’s main theme. The Man in the Velvet Mask is all
about putting on masks: outside of the Doctor and Dodo all of the characters go
by several names throughout the novel, the actors take on the names of their
characters, and the main ‘historical’ figure here is at times only known as a
number in an obvious reference to The Prisoner. It’s a book about looking underneath the mask
and to what people really are, and a lot of these people really are horrible.
The Marquis de Sade is a major player in the novel,
with his not historically accurate adoptive son, Minski, capturing him in the
Bastille and making a deal with interdimensional maggots to take over the world. This is where the controversial nature of The
Man in the Velvet Mask really comes out.
Sade is the root of the word sadism, and as such the novel delights in
gore and rape and sex. Dodo learns to
accept being stripped naked, the Marquis de Sade and Minski both rape or at
least have raped several women. O’Mahony
never goes to the point of gratuity or really handles them lightly like say Timewyrm:
Genesys or Deceit, but uses them to make the reader incredibly uncomfortable
with these people. His prose is almost
lyrical, but for some it will be tainted with something that has every right to
leave you with a disgusting taste. The
Man in the Velvet Mask becomes an incredibly difficult book to read as it
makes the reader face the worst of humanity, yet never devolves into shock
value. It’s one that begs the reader to
think without giving a straight answer.
It’s a book I read and loved, but one that you might not. 8/10.
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