Doctor Who and the Carnival of Monsters was
written by Terrence Dicks, based on the story Carnival of Monsters by
Robert Holmes. It was the 28th
story to be novelized by Target Books.
To me Carnival of Monsters has always been one
of those Doctor Who stories that some seem to underestimate. It’s sandwiched between The Three Doctors
and the massive two story epic Frontier in Space and Planet of the Daleks
so it kind of gets lost in the crowd of the tenth anniversary celebrations, but
it’s a story that I have always had a soft spot for. Now, a review of that story is still
forthcoming though something I intend to eventually write along with the rest
of Season 10. Doctor Who and the
Carnival of Monsters, likewise, is a Target novelization which has kind of
been lost in the novelizations published around it: immediately before are
titans like Doctor Who and the Space War, Doctor Who and the Planet
of the Daleks, and Doctor Who and the Pyramids of Mars while after
it is Doctor Who and the Seeds of Doom and the first Hartnell
novelization since Doctor Who and the Crusaders, Doctor Who and the
Dalek Invasion of Earth. So it is
interesting to see that while Terrance Dicks was already scribing several
novelizations (of the five listed he penned three), Doctor Who and the
Carnival of Monsters feels somewhat special. The novelization doesn’t so much as add
things to the events, sure there are some minor alterations, the sonic screwdriver
being absent and some of the descriptions of the Drashigs, but this is one that
while clearly written based on the scripts but like Barry Letts’ decision to
cut the final shot on repeat, there is a genuinely interesting few changes from
Dicks to make Doctor Who and the Carnival of Monsters work.
The plot is the same, however, Dicks has rearranged
some of the scenes which changes much of the pacing of the story and makes it
work as a book and not as a television serial.
Instead of opening on Inter Minor, we open with the Doctor and Jo
arriving, helping create an actual sense of mystery that the S.S. Bernice
might not actually be a ship in the alien ocean. This also allows Dicks to explore the dictatorship
on Inter Minor, not by adding new characters or a plot of revolution of the
Functionaries but by exploring our three officials and exploring how they react
to the chaos the miniscope brings. This
slows some of the things down and makes some of the novel feel a bit of a drag,
especially as there are sequences that are just functional in communicating the
events of the story, perhaps because Dicks was already writing quite a few scripts
and didn’t have as much time to explore what he could do in each one,
especially with Doctor Who and the Dalek Invasion of Earth bringing the First
Doctor to a brand new generation of children, it means that this book suffers
slightly.
Overall Doctor Who and the Carnival of Monsters
is still great, it’s a story that has always been underrated and the
novelization continues to understand what makes Robert Holmes’ script
work. There are some improvements
especially in Dicks converting to prose in the Inter Minor segments, but the
Doctor and Jo’s plot is one that honestly works better on television as while
you can hear the characters they aren’t given as much of an inner life as the
rest of the characters. 8/10.
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