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Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Ghost Devices by: Simon Bucher-Jones

 

Ghost Devices is a weird book.  The second from author Simon Bucher-Jones and the first of the New Adventures to feature Bernice Summerfield that really feels like it was meant to be a Doctor Who story but the Doctor has been removed.  Not even the previous book, Deadfall, which was an adaptation of a fan Doctor Who audio story, felt like it was meant to be a Doctor Who story.  Ghost Devices is different, it’s a story that feels divided into several 50 page chunks which almost changes like it’s meant to be a classic Doctor Who serial.  Importantly, there is a cameo from the Seventh Doctor with the serial numbers filed off implying that this is all one of his plans a la Birthright, but because the Doctor can’t be used his influence throughout isn’t integrated which was what made Birthright work.  The final 50 pages are actually the most interesting going into several possible timelines which is as densely written as Simon Bucher-Jones is known to be, but the story is also all about a mysterious artefact and an amnesiac of the People.  There are reptilian races and imperialism and honestly a lot going on for a 250 page book, especially when the plot likes to go off in different directions every 50 pages.  Bucher-Jones’ prose is quite difficult to follow in places, especially as it feels like the first 50 pages especially could be cut and the plot would remain largely unchanged.  The final 50 pages which go into an almost dreamscape/alternate universe sequence which is what Bucher-Jones excels at, especially when there’s an imperialist soldier version of Benny who honestly deserves a novel on her own, who grew up with her father present as he didn’t run away in this timeline.

 

The Spire itself, the alien artefact on the planet, has this weird presence in Ghost Devices, in a way that it’s mentioned on the back cover as this important thing, but when you’re reading there really isn’t importance put on it until what feels like quite late in the novel.  The same can be said with the People: Clarence is a character who appears here in a stereotypical angelic form, is an amnesiac People, and is set up as a major player, but then he really isn’t.  Like he appears throughout, but he feels more supportive than being a main character in the novel.  Clarence is a given name from Benny, with Bucher-Jones not really doing a lot to explore the people, at least not like Ben Aaronovitch or Lawrence Miles would.  He gives his People character a normal name, a reference to It’s a Wonderful Life, not following the naming conventions Aaronovitch laid out in The Also People.  Clarence being essentially a reference to It’s a Wonderful Life, and to a lesser extent The Bishop’s Wife, is perhaps an encapsulation of the issues with Bucher-Jones’ style and Ghost Devices.  It’s a book that is full of references to things inside of Doctor Who and pop culture and film at large.  There’s also a tendency to switch perspective to in universe books and other perspectives, marked initially in bold in between paragraphs, but then after the first 50 pages stops happening unless it’s an extract from Benny’s in universe diary which makes the transitions from scene to scene more difficult then they had to be.  That isn’t to say there aren’t things to like, Clarence is fun and the last 50 pages could easily be their own story on their own, Benny’s characterization is fun and it’s clear Bucher-Jones preferred her to Chris and Roz, plus a few other characters who appear here and there.

 

Overall, Ghost Devices is a short book that feels quite long, almost too long.  It’s a book which doesn’t know exactly what it wants to be about, wanting to play in a box of the Doctor Who universe but doesn’t know how to do that without the Doctor there, going so far as to putting him there in a way that wasn’t just tangential to the plot like some of the other cameos.  It’s a story whose title including ghosts feels like this book is almost a ghostly imprint of something that could have been great, but doesn’t quite have bones to pull it together.  3/10.

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