Bunker Soldiers
is an interesting novel. It’s one of the
few books to use the team of the First Doctor, Steven, and Dodo, with only
Steve Lyons’ Salvation doing so and Dodo only appearing in two additional
novels, The Man in the Velvet Mask and Who Killed Kennedy?. It is also a novel that straddles two ‘eras’
of the show, mainly the two subsections of the Hartnell era, reflecting much of
the tone of the first two seasons under producer Verity Lambert while also
reveling in a plot that fits in with the third season of transition away from
history towards more alien stories. This
book is essentially a base under siege, but the base is the city of Kyiv on the
verge of the Mongol Siege of Kyiv in 1240.
The siege lasted a week and ended with the people of Kyiv dead, with an
estimated 2,000 survivors of the estimated 50,000 inhabitants meaning that the
tone of Bunker Soldiers is appropriately dark. Martin Day has learned since his last solo
novel, The Menagerie, and grown as a writer to steep the novel in this
atmosphere of doom a la The Massacre of St. Bartholomew’s Eve with some
of the humor of The Myth Makers there just to make it not be a complete
dirge. The book also is steeping itself
in the history, the Doctor at the very beginning of the novel establishes the
idea that the city will be sieged and there is nothing he, Steven, and Dodo can
do about it. They just have to get away,
which is difficult when the TARDIS is captured following the outline of earlier
historicals like Marco Polo and The Aztecs.
Indeed, this is much of the first third of the novel following
the historical ‘let’s get back to the TARDIS narrative’ leading to a point
where the Doctor exits for a while as if Hartnell had a vacation. Now this is not a pure historical story. There is an alien killer stalking the streets
of Kyiv, several chapters from the point of view of this thing, killing in odd
patterns, letting some go for mysterious reasons. It’s how the genuinely evocative cover of this
book comes to be but a lot of it is a background threat as Day focuses on the
character drama of Steven and Dodo attempting to stay alive while suspicion
lays on them. They arrive via the TARDIS
arriving in a home while a family is eating dinner. Dodo has the focus of making a friend and
discussing young love adding some humanity to the proceedings while Steven is
eventually thrown into a prison cell for the murders. Although he is exonerated for the crime, the
time from his perspective (and much of the novel is in the first person from
Steven’s perspective) creates this intimate feeling to the novel almost like a Companion
Chronicle, to which Day would contribute two installments at the time of
writing this review. There is a genuine
fear that they will not be able to get away once the siege begins nor able to
actually help anyone survive the siege.
Interestingly, they almost are able to in the end of the novel when the
alien’s history is revealed and what exactly it’s doing in this time
period. The interference from Steven and
Dodo really only ensure that history stays on the right track. Day draws on historical records, with some
license as you would expect from Doctor Who, to make Bunker Soldiers
work as a novel. The historical figures
are close to what you would expect, with the interesting amoral perspective
taken from the Doctor without shying away from the horrors of a city under
siege and the destruction that was to follow.
Overall, Bunker Soldiers is a really nice little
piece of Hartnell style Doctor Who, although this is a novel that suffers
from some pacing problems and some of the flaws of certain Hartnell serials,
especially those near the end of his run.
While Dodo is nicely characterized, she isn’t actually unique in her
characterization and could be switched with Vicki quite easily, although Steven
is clearly Steven Taylor and the Doctor is clearly the Doctor. It’s an enjoyable ride of a novel, but does
have some heavy problems. 7/10.
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