J.R.R. Tolkein famously held allegory in disregard due
to its limiting effect on storytelling: to write a true allegory one must
create a one-to-one relationship between an aspect of the work that becomes
poor if any divergence is made. Mad
Dogs and Englishmen in part feels like Paul Magrs wanted to take the idea
of allegory and see how far he could diverge while making things incredibly over
the top and camp, specifically writing an allegory for the Inklings and the
dynamic between Tolkein and his close friend C.S. Lewis with a third interloper
I suppose meaning to represent Meryn Peake or something. The Smudglings as they are called have let an
interloper into their group who has confused the Tolkein allegory, Reginald
Tyler, to rewrite his The True History of Planets (a book which was
already making its way to be over 1,000 pages) into a story about intelligent
poodles from space, reflecting the politics on Dogworld which is ruled by an
Empress and has its own Princess Margaret grabbing for power. There is also a world for cats but that is
one I’ve decided not to name for the double entendre should be obvious to the
reader of this review.
This is only one of the three time periods that the
book generally takes place in: 1942 with Tyler, John Cleavis, and newcomer
William Freer; Las Vegas in the 1960s with Noel Coward and pop star Brenda
Soobie who should be obvious to any reader as a version of Iris Wildthyme, and
1978 where stop motion animation pioneer Ron Von Arnim is being replaced by CGI
in John Fuchas’ filmed version of The True History of Planets. These plots somehow manage to overlap with
the poodles finding their way into the TARDIS with two of their friendlier number
intersecting a television miniseries version of The True History of Planets. The True History of Planets and its
adaptations are clearly the analogue to The Lord of the Rings with Iris
Wildthyme and her bus becoming an analogue for The Lion, the Witch, and the
Wardrobe in genuine bits of absurdity.
The Doctor, Fitz, and Anji are also here, pushing the plot forward at
every opportunity but somehow they are too subtle and normal for Mad Dogs
and Englishmen. No, I’m serious, the
Eighth Doctor is somehow playing the straight man in this one as he tries to
put the plot together but becomes exasperated with Iris, MIAOW, the poodles,
and a time travelling Noel Coward. Magrs
is suppressing any lingering angst from The Adventuress of Henrietta Street
and despite the back cover referencing a dark figure that you begin the novel
believing might be Sabbath, and then the Master, but you become quite surprised
when it eventually comes together. Fitz
has to be with Iris for a decent chunk of the book so he is out of commission as
he also can’t really deal with the insanity of the Time Lady who can’t be a Time
Lady since Gallifrey is destroyed, while Anji is stuck in an awkward situation
in the past.
Overall, Mad Dogs and Englishmen may be the
most Paul Magrs a Paul Magrs novel has ever Paul Magrs. The cover is garish with a banner and gold
logo proudly declaring the “100th BBC Doctor Who Novel” and features
poodles with hands and weaponry, so the appearance of Iris Wildthyme becomes
somehow one of the more normal things of the book. Yet, this is a novel that I couldn’t help but
quickly fall in love with for how weird and fun it is, the fun coming from the
out there twists and turns that really work well with Magrs’ writing one of his
more straight forward stories. The prose
itself is beautifully simple and leans less on the esoteric but is nevertheless
weird and insane and just a genuinely good time from start to finish. 10/10.
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