The Eighth Doctor Adventures have generally struggled
when it comes to characterizing its female companions. Sam Jones as initial companion was by far the
weakest of the bunch, largely having her characterization be shallowly defined
as activist and sassy as her character traits in an attempt to replicate the
success of Bernice Summerfield. Her
immediate successor Compassion fared better by at least having a defined character
and interesting concept for a companion, a woman from the future becoming a
sentient TARDIS, but again there was inconsistencies in characterization and
underutilization until her last run of appearances. The current female companion, Anji Kapoor, by
comparison is a back to basics model of companion who doesn’t really want to travel
with the Doctor. Her introduction, Escape
Velocity, was something of a mission statement for the character was that
her boyfriend Dave was the one who was really companion material, but he was
murdered so Anji took his place. Now
here I am several books later and a year since I last read a Doctor Who
book with the enigma that is Mark Clapham’s Hope, the book that feels
like it’s meant to be Anji’s book. As a
character she has been served well in previous books but with installments in
the lead-up to this like The Adventuress of Henrietta Street being very
much the Doctor’s book and even further back Revolution Man being largely
Fitz’s book, Anji needs one that essentially defines who the character will be
and what she needs to go on. It becomes especially
interesting because that’s not how the book actually begins.
Hope begins with Mark
Clapham deciding to push the Doctor and company to the end of the universe in a
setup that Russell T. Davies would draw on for “Utopia”. The setting is literally called Hope and it
is clear from the off that the hope is false.
There is an organized militia in the city of Hope, the leader of the
city is Silver another time traveler of a sort with a mechanical exoskeleton and
electronic memory, and the TARDIS falls into the sea. Much of Hope owes itself to film noir
as it does cyberpunk, blending the two genres wonderfully with the Doctor being
put in his own desperate situation. This
is one of those points where the Doctor’s own need for control becomes a
problem for himself, agreeing to help Silver in exchange for retrieval of the
TARDIS. While not made explicit in the text,
Silver is a Cyberman, converted at some point in Earth’s future while retaining
aspects of his humanity. At this point
in the future, humanity has already evolved so seeing three figures that look
all too human, and for one of them have found themselves closer to humanity then
ever before, they are the outsiders.
Silver as a character also fits largely into the mythic trickster category
of fiction: offering people exchanges for what they think they want, always with
a price and twist on the original deal, and this is the man the Doctor must
make a deal with to see himself, Fitz, and Anji survive. The Doctor and Fitz’s plot to hunt a killer
is one of those perfectly good plots, Clapham’s prose is quite compelling and
it allows a lot of worldbuilding of the setting. If it were just this plot, you’d have a
fairly solid Doctor Who novel, but Anji is what elevates it above into something
at the very least more interesting.
Anji Kapoor didn’t really want to travel the universe,
that was Dave’s wish. Like happens with
many of the Doctor’s companions along with the wonder of the universe there are
also the dangers and trauma, especially present around this period of the
Doctor’s life. Mad Dogs and Englishmen
may have proven a respite, but Hope sees Anji’s mind preoccupied with
thoughts of Dave from the first page.
This is a story where there honestly isn’t much for the Doctor’s
companions to do, so Anji has plenty of time to herself and time to speak with Silver. Clapham sets up this interplay of predation
between the two. Silver is far too
charming and has far too many resources at his disposal, and Anji has been
thinking about Dave. Silver wants an
escape, not a way to steal the TARDIS, but a way for Anji to give him the
knowledge to build one of his own. Silver’s backstory is framed as a pulp
adventure hero’s backstory and that pulpy charm allows him the perfect route
under Anji’s skin. Despite in her heart
knowing that Dave is gone and never coming back, time travel does not allow for
resurrection at least in the usual framework of Doctor Who, Anji’s
temptation to have a Dave II cloned and brought into existence is the
unsettling aspect of Hope. It’s
the hope that gets the woman through, and is something that has already
shattered when the idea first arises, elevating Clapham’s novel.
Overall, Hope is a great novel to come back to the
Eighth Doctor, Fitz, and Anji after my stint away. While not particularly strong in certain
areas, the Doctor’s plot is actually quite weak in places and a bit too
standard, it philosophically embodies a lot of what the Eighth Doctor Adventures
are going for. It also gets to the roots
of what the Cybermen and their relationship to humanity actually is without
using the word Cyberman anywhere in the prose, but best of all, it’s the showcase
for Anji Kapoor that she perhaps needed to lay her baggage behind her. 8/10.
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