Switching over to Bernice Summerfield as the protagonist
for the Virgin New Adventures is perhaps not the most accurate description of
just what the books become. The first
five books, certainly, Benny is the driving force and main character, but with the
sixth book, Deadfall by Gary Russell, the protagonist moves away from
Benny and onto Jason Kane, who nicks a data crystal right from Benny’s nose to
what may be the mythical planet of Ardethe.
On the way to the planet is an amnesiac Christopher Rodonte Cwej while
stowing away with Jason is Emile Mars-Smith, determined to get Jason and Benny
back together. Irving Braxiatel also has
a small part to play, mainly as Benny’s confidant in her little interludes. The cover of this book is perhaps one of the
most B-movie covers any of the Virgin New Adventures have had with Chris Cwej
surrounded by two beautiful women, convicts of a prison, and a cat, who isn’t Wolsey,
Wolsey stays on Dellah. This is also
another adaptation of one of the Audio Visuals Doctor Who audios which
were made by him and Nicholas Briggs in the 1980s, and this book actually lends
itself really well for not being a Doctor Who story. Any Doctor Who references directly
have to have the serial numbers filed off and it makes for some interesting speculation
as the implication clearly is that the myth of Ardethe is actually the planet
of Gallifrey (there is a clear degradation of the Shobogans, the setting is the
constellation of Kastoborous, and it is protected by the Knights of Jeneve).
Switching things to Jason Kane as the main character
for this one book also isn’t the most accurate, even if it is brilliant. Emile is the character who gets much more of
the spotlight here in his naïve quest to get Benny and Jason back
together. He has come to terms with his
sexuality and has an impending visit from Scott while Tameka has had Scott’s
child, Scott being perfectly fine with polyamory while Emile kind of has that
tension. Unlike Beyond the Sun, Deadfall
sees Emile immediately recognizing his feelings are actually his own and not
him projecting his insecurities onto others. He is still having issues with his father, but
has realized just how toxic that relationship was and how Tameka was genuinely
just trying to help with him. Jock,
Tameka and Scott’s child, is almost a source of pride for Emile, he finishes the
book seeing the child and loving the child like a father. It makes for a nice little arc for Emile
which is great. Chris on the other hand
has to figure out just who he is and what his purpose is in this post-Lungbarrow
world. He doesn’t even remember who
Roz was and is integral in the resolution of the book, which draws on ideas present
in the Psi-Powers arc of the Virgin New Adventures, as this wouldn’t be a Gary Russell
book without references to other stories.
Jason rounds out our trio of protagonists, and there is still this lovesick
nature to him as while he distracts himself with other women and even gets a fiancé
at the end (ending the book at a reference to Death and Diplomacy and Happy
Endings), he clearly is still in love with Benny.
Benny and Braxiatel have their own little subplot on
Dellah as things are going awry at St. Oscar’s with the discovery of the coordinates. Brax being Benny’s person to complain to
about Jason here is excellent as he is right there with a drink and ready to
hear whatever insanity Jason is about to have.
He’s clearly planning something in the background as Russell drops hints
here which are a lot of fun, and Benny’s outbursts against Jason are also way too
fun. Overall, Deadfall is perhaps
the best Gary Russell Doctor Who book and it’s not even a Doctor Who book. It gives some brilliant insight into where
Jason is post Eternity Weeps and post-Beyond the Sun which makes
for a great protagonist and rounds out essentially what is the first big grouping
of the Bernice Summerfield VNAs. It is a
roller coaster with brilliant implications for the series as a whole and what
has happened to Gallifrey and how this series connects with the Eighth Doctor Adventures. 10/10.
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