“Keepsake”
is written by: Simon Furman with art by:
John Higgins, and lettering by: Zed (a pseudonym for Richard Starkings). It was released in Doctor Who Magazine issue 140
(August 1988) and is reprinted in its original form in Doctor Who: A Cold Day in Hell! by
Panini Books.
“Keepsake” is a story that
exists. It’s yet another installment of the
Doctor Who Magazine comics that limits itself to telling an eight page
story and this time there isn’t actually enough story for about anything. Outside of Doctor Who Magazine, Marvel
UK was in the middle of a multi book crossover involving the character Death’s
Head, something that Doctor Who did participate in with “The Crossroads
of Time”. “Keepsake” is on the margins,
introducing the title character and reading more like a backdoor pilot for the
larger series more than anything of Doctor Who. The issues of many Seventh Doctor comics are
present here, the Doctor doesn’t read as the Doctor. He reads just as generic male character that
could easily be drawn over as a different person outside of the TARDIS
appearing in one panel on the final page.
The Doctor drops bombs on a population to scare them which is a
particularly out of character moment, even for the Seventh Doctor. The argument could be made that since this is
a story not from the Doctor’s perspective there is a sense of unreliability,
but I think that might be giving Simon Furman too much credit for what he is doing.
Keepsake the character is
also not strongly drawn in the eight pages.
He is a merchant with a pet vulture which is clearly meant to be a more
striking image. He is introduced with
hints at depression, something that is cured by meeting an unnamed medic which becomes
the object of his sexual desire. He is
rewarded by the end of the story with a relationship, Furman making the only
female character of this story an unnamed love interest. But then again, this isn’t so much a story
with characters but ciphers for the incredibly light plot to happen
within. That plot is particularly pro-colonialist,
the natives on the planet Ryos are portrayed as savages and needing to be
scared into submission as they kill survivors of a crash. This murder isn’t actually depicted, just
hinted at through dialogue, and there are no native characters in “Keepsake”. At the very least John Higgins’ art is nice,
he is one of the stronger artists and the style is reminiscent of Dave Gibbons’
early work on the strip.
Overall, “Keepsake” is
just another weak Doctor Who Magazine strip to add to the pile. There’s potential in the plot but Furman
doesn’t write a Doctor Who story, instead it reads like a particularly
generic piece of military science fiction across eight pages of ultimately
nothing. 3/10.

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