There is an interesting gimmick in Tomb of Valdemar,
something that makes it stand out from a lot of the other Doctor Who books. There is a frame story from a character telling
this story to a village of people after the fact. Having a frame story is nothing new for books
or even Doctor Who books, but this frame story from Simon Messingham
puts Tomb of Valdemar in the present tense instead of the traditional
past tense prose of practically every other book. This gives the book a very odd tone. It does feel like you’re sitting around a
fire, being told a tale which is sort of what Messingham is going for, but it is
also interrupted by the frame story, especially early on and this breaks up the
pace of being told a story. These breaks
especially become an issue when they do not occur at a chapter break which
Messingham could have used as a natural break in the narrative, instead often occurring
right in the middle of a page meaning it comes across as choppy and not easy to
read instead of a natural interruption which is what Messingham is clearly
going for. This is a shame because there
is a mystery in what the frame story means, the narrator’s identity is revealed
at the very end of the book in a very clever review and the whole idea of the
story is called into question. From the
first page this is a book where you question if the story is really what
happened to the Doctor and Romana after The Ribos Operation, and the
final reveal makes you wonder about a lot of things, tying back into Season 16
and into the current arc in the Eighth Doctor Adventures range.
The entire premise involves this entity of the Old
Ones, Lovecraftian beings which were in the universe before and are essentially
forces of nature, Valdemar. Valdemar was
entombed, or so the legends say, and like The Tomb of the Cybermen a
team is coming to unearth this tomb to prove the existence of a legend. The Doctor, Romana, and K9 are dragged off
their search for the Key to Time by the TARDIS malfunctioning and the Tracer
being damaged. Romana knows Valdemar is
a myth, an impossibility. This is a
story all about a fictional story becoming real and adding that extra lens of
the frame story allows Messingham to add some depth to the proceedings. Valdemar is not ever actually seen as a
character, but its shadow is felt throughout the book as the party gets ever
closer to its release. Tomb of
Valdemar becomes a story that has a cosmic entity right off-page looming while
human villains play their own machinations: insanity sets in at several points
and this is the adventure that almost gets Romana killed. Messingham is very clever in creating a cast that
are all stereotypes from the strong female leader to the insane, power hungry
villain, and the poor lackey who gets broken at the first opportunity.
K9 is basically a nonentity in this story, being
written off pretty early on as Messingham clearly knows that including him would
cause problems. The Doctor is captured
fairly well for the season that this is supposed to be placed in, but part of
that is mired by the fact that the Season 16 Doctor has kind of become a
generic Doctor. There are definitely
scenes where you can hear Tom Baker in the book, especially in the beginning
and the end of the book, but really this is Romana’s book. That’s actually an interesting thing for this
one as Tomb of Valdemar is a book which was reprinted in a limited
edition Fourth Doctor Time Capsule along with a beautiful statuette, Genesis
of the Daleks, Terror of the Zygons, and several other goodies for
fans. This is Romana’s book: she’s the
one who gets to reflect on her current situation of helping to find the Key to
Time. This is the book where she decides
to stay with the Doctor throughout the quest, even though that’s a diversion. Mary Tamm’s portrayal shines through
Messingham’s prose, and there is a real sense of bridging the first two Key to
Time stories and the final revelation about how this story changes Romana is
beautiful.
Overall, Tomb of Valdemar may not be the best
representation of the Fourth Doctor and Romana era of the show, it does tell an
interesting story through an unreliable narrator. A very different approach to metatext occurs
than say The Well-Mannered War, but there is a lot here to like which
makes it worth the read. 7/10.
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