City of Death
was written by James Goss, based on the television story of the same name by Douglas
Adams from an idea by David Fisher. It
was the 166th story to be novelized by BBC Books.
In adapting a television story to a full-length novel
for BBC Books, authors have a variety of options. James Goss took the time to do more than just
transcribing the dialogue and actions of the television story City of Death
which would have left the novelization quite short, especially as the story builds
on the location footage of Paris being used without much dialogue as there is
an extended chase sequence back to the TARDIS.
The way this is adapted is the pinnacle of Goss’s style and flair for
making something visual translate to prose, by adding in several interludes
with the characters who appear for only one scene: the artist who paints
Romana, the tour guide at the Louvre, and the patrons played by John Cleese and
Eleanor Bron all get to have small interludes which weave their way throughout
the novel. This even begins in the added
prologue where Goss adds backstory between the opening scenes of the story on
Hermann, Duggan, and the Countess with a small lead in for the Doctor in the
TARDIS which are all things that didn’t need to be there yet they add so much
character and flair to separate itself from the television story. The advantage is being taken of making Paris
feel like the City of Death as it’s essentially a character on its own,
the city is alive and has a life of its own with active areas at night next to
areas that are dead.
The one element of the plot added to increase the
comic absurdity inherent in Adams’ script was the fact that Scaroth didn’t realize
he was an alien until the end of episode one cliffhanger, something on
television that only is there because that’s what Doctor Who does. This isn’t a bad thing, but when writing it
Goss had already committed to getting inside the character’s head, so he couldn’t
just have the Count rip his face off for no reason. He is explored by Goss as someone who has been
attempting to act human but never realizing that he is not human so the uncanny
valley of the character. The idea is
that he is an art collector who is doing the whole Mona Lisa heist to ensure that
the funding for his time travel experiments can continue, something that gets
the Doctor and Romana involved. While
they succeed as they do on television, a minor change is making it explicit
that Romana being brought in to help on the time travel experiments so the plans
can be brought forward. There is also a
lot more explicit disconnect between the Count and Kerensky, who here is shown
to die from his perspective where the book takes a turn into black comedy for
three pages before going back to the normal tone. There’s also this weird moment added where
the Doctor implies that Kerensky’s work will actually be remembered, but that
might be another Kerensky which is just another aspect of humor injected into
the story.
Goss should also be praised for not attempting to make
City of Death the same length as Gareth Roberts’ novelization of Shada. As this is an adaptation of a four part
story, it doesn’t need to be over four hundred pages, yet still clocks in at
around three hundred pages. This doesn’t
actually bring the story down at all as Goss’s prose grabs the reader from the
first page and doesn’t let go. There isn’t
an attempt to imitate Douglas Adams’ style as Roberts’ homaging tendencies. The famous lines are all there, but Goss
allows City of Death to have his own mark on the story without changing
any of the events. Goss isn’t trying to
improve anything as the story is already thought of as one of Doctor Who’s
best stories anyway, indeed it is the story with the most viewers on broadcast
(partially due to other channels being off air at the time). It makes the
novelization work and perhaps be the perfect tribute to the story and the original
author even if it had more time to be written than the original televised
story. 10/10.
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