A camera
obscura describes how light through a pinhole into a dark space will invert an
image projected through the dark interior.
It’s a pinhole image and has had several uses throughout history to
teach art, observe eclipses, and eventually during the development of
photography and film. Camera Obscura
is Lloyd Rose’s second Doctor Who novel, once again featuring the
Doctor, Fitz, and Anji and like her previous novel, The City of the Dead,
it is one of the best the series has to offer.
In essence, Rose is exploring the reflection to humanity the Doctor
poses, Sabbath as a reflection of the Doctor and their own identities, and in
many ways the Victorian origins of the Doctor as a character. The plot of Camera Obscura is one
involving alterations to the timeline, there’s actually a time machine going
awry and the Doctor, Fitz, and Anji eventually have to work with Sabbath to
stop it and save the day. Rose’s plot is
simple when you actually lay it out, but she does what only can be described as
obfuscating beautifully by slowly torturing the Doctor, suffering from the lack
of heart and reveal in the novel that it’s in Sabbath linking them
intrinsically as similar. Rose
references Victorian and Victorina inspired literature such as “A Scandal in
Bohemia”, The Hound of the Baskervilles, the works of Jules Verne,
Christopher Priest’s 1995 novel The Prestige, Harry Houdini, and the
works of Edgar Allen Poe all as essential for who the Doctor is. He has fallen into this terrible depression,
the novel putting him further through the ringer, positing that without his
second heart he can be grievously injured and nearly die.
When a theatrical
counterweight is landed on his chest, Fitz and Anji individually lose themselves
to their own reflection in each other. They’re
both humans who have been put through their own hell in their own right,
neither quite knowing to do without the Doctor but also knowing that the Doctor
has been irrational for a while. Rose
doesn’t split the novel into subplots, so Fitz and Anji as characters are there
to represent what the Doctor does to people instead of having their own arcs,
which could be a problem but Rose never sacrifices what makes them work as
characters. Early in the novel is a
fairly classic sequence of logically working through the con of a séance, only to
reveal there is something odd actually going on, mainly that Constance Jane is
actually possessed. There is a magician called
Octave doing impossible tricks with doubles of himself, a psychiatrist and his
evil twin, and Sabbath has saved and hired a female serial killer to be his own
assistant in another reflection of the Doctor.
Rose employs a freak show with the Doctor as his own freak, though the
freak characters are the representation of normalcy in Camera Obscura. Many characters have doubles, quite literally
splinters due to breaking in the timestream, so that anything happening to one
of them happens to the other. Some are
splintered within themselves, as is the case of Jane in an interesting take on
dissociative identity disorder, though attributing that to the science fiction
aspects of the story manifesting in different ways.
Lawrence
Miles did a lot of work in The Adventuress of Henrietta Street to establish
who Sabbath was, but it’s Lloyd Rose here who really takes the character and
makes him work. He is utterly charming,
putting everyone at ease while simultaneously feeling like a predator on the prowl. The way Rose introduces him and the Doctor
both play on similar descriptions to add to the parallels, the prologue and
first chapter both taking their time to establish if it’s Sabbath or the Doctor
we are following. There is a sense that you
know exactly what Sabbath’s plans are and the power he has over the Doctor,
having his heart means that he has claim to part of who the Doctor is. Camera Obscura under the surface
becomes an examination of one’s sense of identity. That’s why dissociative identity disorder is
used in the plot, though it is outdatedly called multiple personality disorder
since this is a book from 2002. The Doctor
has to reclaim his identity by the end, he needs to pick himself up through the
support of Fitz and Anji. The
implication at the end of the novel is that he is regrowing his second heart to
regain his status as Time Lord, because with only one he feels too close to an
odd human. The contempt for humanity is
fascinating for the Doctor, yet as Rose presents it, completely in character. He’s barely a Time Lord and that’s been slowly
killing him.
Overall,
like The City of the Dead and The Adventuress of Henrietta Street,
Camera Obscura is a high concept novel that filters its concepts through
incredibly compelling character drama. The
simplicity of Lloyd Rose’s plot once again makes this one of the best novels BBC
Books has to offer, and once again is a shame that Rose only wrote four Doctor
Who stories. It’s incredibly imaginative
to explore ideas of identity, reflection, and just how the Doctor could never
be equal to humanity (he is above us).
10/10.

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