Doctor Who and the Sontaran Experiment was
written by Ian Marter, based on the story The Sontaran Experiment by Bob
Baker and Dave Martin. It was the
45th story to be novelized by Target Books.
The Sontaran Experiment is
the odd one out for Season 12, only written because Robert Holmes and Philip
Hinchcliffe decided to only use one six-episode serial per season so a two
episode gap was created and filled by Bob Baker and Dave Martin writing a story
meant to be made cheap and on vacation.
The story is a simple runaround on Earth with a Sontaran called Styre
performing experiments on humans to continue their war with the Rutans and
enter the Milky Way, made less interesting by Kevin Lindsay’s ill health and Tom
Baker injuring himself so the battle at the climax is underwhelming. It was also a choice for novelization that
apparently nobody would take except for Ian Marter who of course starred in the
story as Harry Sullivan, which should tell you all you need to know about The
Sontaran Experiment. Because of this
you would expect Doctor Who and the Sontaran Experiment to not work as a
novel, but interestingly it's a lot better in prose form than it ever was on
television. Ian Marter certainly
understands that a lot of the ideas for Sontaran technology has potential and
that potential is grown, the robot scout is an actual threat and not just a
really flimsy prop that trundles on wheels, but hovers above the ground to
stalk its prey which creates this great tension. The pit that Harry falls in is actually a
pit, though there is some humor added as the Doctor berates him for falling
into something that’s essentially out in the open. Styre, renamed Styr, himself is upgraded to an
almost cyborg-esque creature where Marter uses the prose to make him sound more
terrifying than any Sontaran has ever been, which in turn makes the danger
actually feel real. Sarah Jane’s torture
in particular goes to some dark places as her psyche is explored and
deconstructed so her fears can create a genuinely chilling chapter. This is still done in the Target novelization
format, and Marter also doesn’t let the story overstay its welcome as this isn’t
like other two-part story novelizations which somehow find ways to stretch the
format to its limits, the prose is only about 120 pages and the audiobook is 3
hours and 6 minutes.
Overall, Doctor Who and the Sontaran Experiment
is a great example of the Target novelization format being used to take a story
that on television is incredibly bland and make it into something genuinely
engaging. Sure it’s not going to be one
of the absolute best Fourth Doctor stories, but it makes the story worth engaging
with and experiencing in this way at least once. 7/10.
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