Doctor Who and the Daemons
was
written by Barry Letts, based on The Daemons by Guy Leopold (a pseudonym
for Barry Letts and Robert Sloman).
It was the 8th story to be novelized by Target Books.
Barry Letts is a great
producer and a writer with great ideas. The
Daemons, The Time Monster, The Green Death, and Planet of
the Spiders are the four Jon Pertwee serials that he cowrote, albeit
without credit due to being a producer, but there is a reason that Terrance
Dicks and Malcolm Hulke were responsible for novelizing three of those
stories. That reason is Doctor Who and
the Daemons. The Daemons on
television is a fan favorite, one of only three serials to be five episodes
long and playing out like a folk horror story at an isolated village against an
alien demonic entity summoned by the Master.
Letts and Sloman craft a near perfect end to Jon Pertwee’s second
season, so why does the novel not work?
Doctor Who and the
Daemons as a novel follows the television serial beat for
beat, and hey for a lot of novelizations that works. Terrance Dicks is a master of doing a simple
script translation to prose that at worst will create just a nice piece of fluff,
examples of that include Doctor Who and the Time Warrior, Doctor Who
and an Unearthly Child, and The Ambassadors of Death. So why doesn’t that work for Letts? Well, Barry Letts as an author has a tendency
to underwrite scenes, providing almost too many descriptors and actions in a scene
while maintaining this very simplistic style.
There are far too many sequences where the action is almost reported on
without letting us get inside the characters’ heads or understanding the
motivation. This makes the novelization
drag and feel closer to a script in prose form than an actual novel. Compounding this is the length of the
novelization at 172 pages, which while short for any of the other book ranges
is quite long for the novelizations. The
audiobook release comes out to just under 6 hours, while other stories are
generally 3-4 hours comfortably making this a more difficult listen due to the
issues with prose. Letts would only
contribute one other novelization at the end of the range, The Paradise of
Death, novelizing the radio play of the same name. He would contribute to the Virgin Missing Adventures
(with a novelization of The Ghosts of N-Space) and the Past Doctor Adventures
(Deadly Reunion and Island of Death), but if Doctor Who and
the Daemons is any indication he didn’t actually grow as a writer by the
1990s.
This isn’t to say Doctor
Who and the Daemons is terrible. The
script it is adapting is still a cracking story, and whenever Letts attempts to
capture Christopher Barry’s marvelous direction in the prose it is
excellent. He also does an excellent job
with replicating the dynamic between the Third Doctor, Jo Grant, and as the
book goes on the Master who form the centerpiece of the novel. This means that it is not a massive problem
with telling the story, just keeping its reader engaged throughout. The side characters don’t always fare as
well, with Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart perhaps the most out of character,
acting more like an incompetent leader instead of the strong character readers
would know from the television series.
Overall, Doctor Who
and the Daemons is sadly one you should skip if you have the VHS/DVD/Blu-ray
release of the television story. It’s
let down by weak prose and poor characterization that makes the novel more
difficult to get through while the plot itself is preserved rather nicely. It’s not a bad book, but it becomes the
definition of a middle of the road book.
5/10.
No comments:
Post a Comment