Craig Hinton is a Doctor Who author who infamously
coined the term fanwank in fandom and wrote books where that term was often a
criticism. He was first published with a
Virgin Missing Adventure, The Crystal Bucephalus, and would publish a further
five Doctor Who novels for Virgin and BBC Books along with several short
stories. He had proposed a Sixth Doctor
novel to BBC Books which would have seen an explanation for the Valeyard and
the Sixth Doctor’s regeneration in Time and the Rani, however it was
rejected and could not be completed before his untimely death in 2006. Telos Publishing, who from 2001-2004
published Doctor Who novellas, would eventually publish this proposed novel,
completed by Doctor Who fan Chris McKeon for charity publication in
2008. McKeon would go on to found Black
Glove Studios which would produce fan Doctor Who audios and Time’s
Champion quickly went out of print.
It was virtually unreadable for a number of years as the second hand
market put the book up for exorbitant prices, until 2020 when Telos Publishing
commissioned a special limited reprint, once again donating proceeds going to
the British Heart Foundation (as Hinton died of heart problems). It is this 2020 edition which I was able to
acquire, though sadly that too has gone out of print.
Time’s Champion
is a beast of a novel. Hinton provided an
outline and the first chapter before his untimely death and even that was
enough to give McKeon space to fill a full length novel. The book starts simply: Sergeant Benton is having
a birthday party inviting the UNIT family as well as characters from Hinton’s The
Quantum Archangel, a novel which I haven’t read, Paul and Arlene
Kairos. Arlene as a character is perhaps
too flat, but Paul is incredibly interesting as the host for the Chronovore,
Kronos, from The Time Monster. Arlene
serves the purpose of plot device, sending the party guests and Mel 100 years
in the past to the manor of Madame Clacice Beauvier. Beauvier becomes a secondary and then
tertiary antagonist as the many layers of this book bring in the Valeyard (as
expected) and eventually the six Eternals who are set up as the gods of
Gallifrey. Beauvier does eventually get
an explanation which constitutes one of the books very best twists and allows
Death’s plans to go forward, but there are long stretches of the book where she
disappears for a while. Her reveal ties
heavily into Millennial Rites.
Outside of this there is an author, George McKenzie-Trench who is trying
to complete the manuscript to Time’s Champion, a novel which will be his
magnum opus. This character does not
seem to be an author insert for either Hinton or McKeon, especially as there
are several versions of the character who pop up throughout this rather complex
book.
The first third or so of the novel is incredibly slow,
only really picking up pace once the Valeyard enters the picture. This is after the Doctor goes to Gallifrey,
meaning that Romana, K9, and Vansell all appear as major forces in the
novel. The computer virus Abbadon is
unleashed and the Keeper of the Matrix simply needs the Doctor’s help. Once the Valeyard appears Hinton and McKeon
clearly are having a ball writing the interactions with the Sixth Doctor. The entirely complex plot is all a foil just
so Death can make, in this order, the Valeyard, Mel, and the Doctor her
champion, which is what eventually leads to the regeneration. The regeneration scene itself is an
incredibly emotional one, lasting most of the last chapter from the Doctor’s
perspective. The Doctor reflects on each
of his past regenerations, meets his final incarnation, and eventually finds a
way to trick Death, giving himself to Time, and allowing the Seventh Doctor to
take over with the Valeyard defeated, but not dead. It becomes an incredibly poignant sequence
and this entire novel could be considered canonical as McKeon includes Spiral
Scratch (and retroactively The Sixth Doctor: The Last Adventure) into
the possibility. The Valeyard is then
sent off to Matrix (and most likely his other Big Finish appearances) Overall, Time’s Champion is a book
which needs a run that lasts longer than two months. There are definitely two hands at work here
as the second chapter onward has a similar but distinct style to what came
before, though it is mired in the Doctor Who universe to almost a
backbreaking degree that it is slightly held back, especially as some of the
characters come across as paper thin while others are complex. 8/10.
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