The Shadow in the Glass
is a book which should not be good. It’s
Doctor Who tackling post-World War II conspiracies involving the
survival and lineage of Adolf Hitler, yes Adolf Hitler survival conspiracies
are the main drive of this book. Justin
Richards and Stephen Cole also only had a limited time to write the novel after
Gary Russell’s Instruments of Darkness was delayed and they needed a
Sixth Doctor book to fill the slot stat.
This is kind of indicative of the issues at BBC Books, if this were
Virgin Publishing there would have been a delay a la So Vile a Sin and
the slot would have been essentially skipped over that month. Because this is the BBC and they are pushing
out a lot of Doctor Who content in the early 2000s, with 2 books a
month, the final VHS’s and by this point the growing DVD range, there seems to
be no time to stop and let a release just deal with the delay. Now having Richards and Cole cowriting this
actually helps with the compressed writing time, the ideas are allowed to bounce
off one another and the novel is wrapped around a fairly simple idea: an alien
craft shot down during World War II near the British coast cause a legacy of
military occupation guarding a secret which involves a conspiracy about the
Hitler lineage surviving the apparent suicide in the bunker somehow. The book has the Doctor being called in by
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart to help investigate and eventually unravel the
conspiracy, culminating in a climax that travels to the bunker to see how it is
done. It's very much a novel going from
point A to point B with little subplots or diversions, except the alien aspect
which is perhaps where the book fails.
The alien threat is such a non-entity that despite often being brought
up it leaves the reader’s mind quite quickly as the historical elements from
Richards and Cole are far more interesting.
This is also hyped up as one of the best of the Past
Doctor Adventures, and while it is very good, it still is a book that
underutilizes its science fiction elements, though that is buffered by coating
it in mysticism almost in parallel to Terrance Dicks’ Timewyrm: Exodus. There’s also the more egregious example of
essentially fridging the main and essentially only female character of note,
Claire Aldwych, a journalist who serves the role of companion. She is a wonderful character who honestly
could have been a perfect match for the Sixth Doctor had the decision been made
to keep her on, but her death is essentially the wrap up of the novel so Adolf
Hitler Jr. can exist…or possibly not exist as it implies history is
rewritten. She is shot and her body
burned to be the body double for Hitler’s wife and lover, no seriously. This is a plot point that Richards and Cole
try to treat with severity, but as it comes at the end outside of some
genuinely painful reactions from the Doctor and the Brigadier, the
ramifications of the death just aren’t dealt with and literally the entire plot,
a plot involving almost exclusively other male characters, is hung on this brutal
death. It’s an added shame as the climax
itself is excellent, there is some brilliant tension work as the Doctor, Brigadier,
and Claire figure out some of the conspiracies before liaisons with Winston
Churchill and Soviet forces, and having Hitler Jr. brought back in time (who
could have easily been the body double as he is quickly shot by his father).
Overall, The Shadow in the Glass is a book with
some genuinely shocking elements, some terrible uses of fridging, and a Doctor
Who book with Adolf Hitler on the cover (luckily completely redesigned for
the 2015 reprint). It’s also a book that
genuinely works at telling a good story from writers who were on a terribly
short deadline but managed to include a lot of researched history, something Richards
happened to be doing at the time, and tries to take some care with the subject
matter. It’s also a book that somehow
manages to be leagues ahead of the previous Past Doctor Adventure, Rags,
which is somehow more offensive than the one that literally features the son of
Hitler so it’s weird that I actually recommend this as at least an interesting and
really fun read. 8/10.
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