It is an odd day when a review of a book by Steve
Lyons turns out to not be up to almost the gold standard of Doctor Who. His novels up to this point have essentially
all been highlights for the Virgin New Adventures, Virgin Missing Adventures,
and Past Doctor Adventures, but his debut for the Eighth Doctor Adventures is
one which falls into several pitfalls of the range thus far making a story that
doesn’t actually add up to anything substantial. The Space Age has a fairly intriguing
premise, though it is nothing unusual when it comes to a Doctor Who
premise, seeing on the surface an alternate history of Earth where technology
has taken on that future aesthetic of the 1950s and 1960s ruled in a sealed
city. Lyons uses misdirect with an
extended prologue setting up power couple Alec Redshaw and Sandra McBride, a
couple of teenagers who are deeply in love in the year 1965. Only the prologue indulges in that saccharine
style of romance which sets up the book excellently, with Lyons really selling
this whole star-crossed lovers angle going out to somehow change history. Their jaded selves as essentially puppet
rulers of this city and this city’s gangs also fill the role. The Mods and the Rockers are clearly
influenced by the subcultures of the 1960s with some flair, but the actual
characters in the gangs are fairly bland and really don’t get a lot of focus or
sense. While The Space Age has numerous
problems, the worldbuilding clearly isn’t one as Lyons excels at filling this
faux future city with such atmosphere and intrigue that it almost single
handedly saves a lot of the book from the numerous flaws that it has.
Compassion stands out as the biggest problem here, Steve
Lyons like Trevor Baxendale before him, just doesn’t know what to do with her. Gail Simone names the trope of killing off a
woman simply to advance the plot of the male characters around that woman fridging
or putting the woman in the refrigerator after a character in Green Lantern,
and that’s essentially what happens here with Compassion. She isn’t dead, but she starts the book,
already landed in the city, deactivated and unable to move or even speak. This is how she remains for most of the novel
which is simply not a good move: the Eighth Doctor Adventures have setup Compassion
as the focus of the arc, so giving her a full book where she barely features is
simply a problem. At least Coldheart
featured her as a character where she got to interact, here she simply does
nothing. Fitz is served at least a
little better in that Lyons characterizes him, but Fitz kind of fills a role
that could have been filled here by literally any other companion. There’s a little fun here with Fitz enjoying
himself in this future which is essentially modeled itself after the media he
would have consumed in his own time, making it an interesting little idea. He also gets stabbed which feels like a kick
of adrenaline in a book that limps through an already short runtime. The Doctor is actually characterized really
well, as he plays throughout quite a lot of the city with a flair for the
dramatic. When it’s eventually revealed
that an evil computer is behind everything Lyons starts to go down the tribute
to The Green Death route, but then lampshades that fact as it’s clearly
a story that he’s enjoying writing.
Lyons’ writing style is at least an easy read, but it really doesn’t
feel like something which ends up creating a book that could have been great.
Overall, despite it’s genuinely evocative title, The
Space Age doesn’t ever amount to anything of note. This feels like it could have been released
literally at any point as filler which feels like an attempt to avoid the harsh
reality of the Compassion arc (especially The Shadows of Avalon and The
Fall of Yquatine) by playing into problematic tropes and genuinely just
leaving the reader with a genuine bland taste in the mouth. It could have been a much more interesting
book if perhaps it was released before The Shadows of Avalon, but it
does not do enough to actually bring things together for a good
experience. 5/10.
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