Doctor Who and the Leisure Hive
was written by David Fisher, based on his story The Leisure Hive. It was the 69th story to be
novelized by Target Books.
This is a book which I listened to the audiobook
reading immediately after the horror inspired Doctor Who and the Brain of
Morbius, which created for an interesting mood as on television, The
Leisure Hive is not a horror story, but a comedy with most of the jokes
surgically removed by script editor Christopher H. Bidmead in an attempt to
make Doctor Who a more serious science fiction program. That of course doesn’t work when David Fisher
had already contributed three heavily comedic scripts with The Stones of
Blood, The Androids of Tara, and The Creature from the Pit as
well as contributing the original idea to what would become City of Death. Doctor Who and the Leisure Hive as a
novelization immediately reinserts much of the dry humor due to David Fisher
being tapped to write the book himself, two years after airing and enough time
to move past the Bidmead style of Doctor Who. The first few chapters are extended sequences
detailing the opening shots and the history of the Argolin/Foamasi conflict,
done in tribute to Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
The backstory for the conflict is actually a gift, it
allows the reader to understand the conflict and a lot of the motivation for
the side characters who on television never really got enough time to develop
naturally with Lovett Bickford’s rather odd direction. This does cause an interesting pacing issue
as there are stretches of this book where the Doctor and Romana do not appear
while the final three chapters, which are less than one-third of the book,
encompass all of Part Three and Four, which makes me wonder if Fisher knew that
his story wasn’t highly regarded so attempted to build a comedy heavy first
half to offset the rather bland second half which involves a takeover, mistaken
identity, and the same weak conclusion that we saw on television. Luckily Fisher does make the story in general
more interesting, with some of the intrigue of Mina’s dealings appearing on a
scene on a futuristic Earth instead of confining most of the action to the
actual Leisure Hive, and the buildup towards the Foamasi’s appearance being
done with more flair than them essentially showing up right at the end. There’s also some genuinely horrifying
moments when the tachyonics generator malfunctions, killing its volunteer while
Fisher describes the blood, guts, and pain the man experiences. It hits the reader like a brick which is
incredibly important for setting up the actual danger of the situation and is
followed up on when the Doctor is aged with some genuine existential dread
brought in.
Overall, Doctor Who and the Leisure Hive is a
good example of a Doctor Who author taking the chance to improve on
aspects of a television story, however, not enough to make this an amazing
story. There are still the flaws
inherent in The Leisure Hive even if the tone has changed to a more
dark, absurdist comedy as it still reflects the issues of a slow moving plot
with a back half compressed far too much.
6/10.
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