Keith Topping is an author whose absolute best work
had been with cowriter Martin Day. The
Devil Goblins of Neptune was the perfect way to open the Past Doctor
Adventures and The Hollow Men is a fascinating horror story, but after
those two books he stopped working with Martin Day and his first solo novel, The
King of Terror, was incredibly forgettable, building itself around one
particular cliché joke from Douglas Adams and playing it straight. His second solo novel, Byzantium!, has
a similar premise, taking a fairly comedic story and turning it into a more serious
riff. The Romans is Dennis
Spooner’s second Doctor Who story and the first story to be played as an
all out farce. While there is certainly
danger, Ian is sold into slavery and Barbara accidentally catches the eye of
the lecherous Emperor Nero, it is all presented with this air of bawdy comedy
so Keith Topping decides to do a serious take on the Roman Empire under Nero,
sets the story in Byzantium, and plays it essentially straight while still
being a prequel to The Romans.
Where Byzantium! perhaps falls down the most is the fact that it
is a prequel to The Romans and so is inextricably linked to that story’s
format, structure, and tone while Topping makes the novel a novel with very
little humor. Topping has clearly put in
a lot of time to research Byzantium circa 64 CE and the rise and spread of
Christianity specifically surrounding the Gospel of Mark, the first of the
Gospels in the current Biblical canon to be written. He splits up the characters into their own
subplots, just like in The Romans, though here everyone is on their own
and there isn’t the comedic sequences of the just misses of characters meeting
each other. The cover is especially
evocative with the crucifixion as a form of punishment being something Topping
attempts to analyze.
As this is a book full of subplots, it’s one that is
essentially held together by how the point of view characters are
characterized, and sadly that is a mixed bag.
There is a scene in the TARDIS very early on where this is exemplified,
Ian and Barbara are pretty okay in the scene, slowly simmering the sexual
tension between them while Ian makes an odd joke, but the Doctor and Vicki are
both almost flanderized. The Doctor is
incredibly crochety, brushing off Vicki’s concerns and outright attempting to
leave the time period out of fear that Barbara might try to change things,
despite having gone on other adventures with Ian and Barbara, both of whom
understand they cannot change history. Vicki
on the other hand is portrayed as a petulant child, definitely younger than the
15-year-old age typically inferred from the casting documents and reflection on
the character as a replacement for Susan.
Here for a lot of the book she feels too young and too unintelligent,
with Topping thinking that because she’s from the future it means she must not
have common sense about history, despite the Doctor, Ian, and Barbara all
mentioning how they teach each other about the places they visit. Byzantium! is a book that really does
take advantage of its historical setting which is really where the book shines,
it’s an examination of a culture from a purely historical viewpoint while attempting
to distance itself from its farcical predecessor.
There is this especially beautiful scene where Ian shows
Vicki several constellations and they have this amazing discussion about life
and pollution. That’s also what follows
the Doctor’s plot in the book as he deals with the translation of the Gospel of
Mark, where Topping doesn’t have the Doctor take a religious stance so to
speak, but a stance towards the artistic value of the gospel which I think is
perhaps the best approach. It’s also here
where the closest Topping gets to the more mischievous First Doctor, as he
delights in running circles around others.
Meanwhile Ian is also put into a situation where he comes into contact
with early Christians so we explore his view of religion which is one of
tolerance to deal with some of the fear of persecution that could happen in
this historical setting. Though this
doesn’t last with his best bits in the book being whenever we explore his past
along with the prologue and epilogue which reveals he and Barbara have married
and had a son which is equally nice. Barbara
also is really well characterized, however, she doesn’t actually get a whole lot
to do in the book.
Overall, Byzantium! is a book that has a lot to
love about it. Keith Topping has done a
lot of research and really spends much of the book using the TARDIS team to
explore the history in often brutal detail.
It may be a book that rub some the wrong way but unlike say Rags,
there isn’t this contempt from the author for the era it is in, just instances
of poor characterization perhaps due to Topping’s own writing style and
personal preferences. It’s certainly a
good read though it doesn’t quite go to that threshold of being a great
read. 7/10.
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