The Christmas Invasion was
written by Jenny T. Colgan, based on the story of the same name by Russell T.
Davies. It was the 169th story
to be novelized by BBC Books.
It’s kind of a shame that
I’m doing these novelizations of Russell T. Davies era stories in series broadcast
order, as it means I have already experienced two adapted by their original
writers which allows this elevation from a standard novelization and expansion
of these 45-minute episodes into something genuinely amazing. Jenny T. Colgan was already an established novelist
and storyteller both in and out of the Doctor Who world, having written
two full length Doctor Who novels, several short stories and audios, and
her own series of young adult romantic comedies. She is a lifelong Doctor Who fan, and
you can tell she is relishing the chance to adapt a story from the man whose
era returned her love of the show. The
Christmas Invasion is a Target novelization and I mean that in the absolute
best way possible: it takes the 60 minute Christmas special and adapts it to
the short novel format wonderfully, but unlike the other two modern
novelizations I have covered (perhaps because Colgan didn’t write the original
script) there isn’t actually all that much added in terms of plot or characterization. There is an added prologue and epilogue which
are nice, a few moments scattered throughout that add mini scenes including a
nice description of the Guinevere space program being stared, and an added
adaptation of “Born Again” as a single chapter, but other than that The
Christmas Invasion is “The Christmas Invasion”. It doesn’t take steps to iron out some of the
issues of the televised story, or maybe give Harriet Jones more to do, it’s
perfectly content to be the story and to be just as enjoyable. Colgan’s prose is light and breezy, focused
on converting the performances and emotions of the characters to prose very
well in her added descriptors. There is
an adherence to the script to perhaps too large of a degree, some of the
dialogue being very mid-2000s television dialogue. And of course, the story still has the Doctor
out of the action and the uncertainty of where the Tenth Doctor’s
characterization could go which was something Colgan perhaps could have added
to in a novelization like this. The chapter
titles being all lyrics or titles for Christmas carols was a nice touch to enhance
the Christmas atmosphere though.
Overall, The Christmas
Invasion is a perfectly enjoyable read from an author who knows exactly
what she’s doing, though is perhaps a bit too reserved when it comes to converting
an hour long script into prose. It’s an
experience that if you enjoy “The Christmas Invasion” as a story on television
you are going to enjoy The Christmas Invasion in prose form. It does make me want to see Colgan let loose with
the ability to fully expand an episode and maybe not adhere so closely as she did
here, but this is a book that I can happily recommend as a fun time. 7/10.
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