09 April 2023

Books: Doctor Who: The Doctor Trap By Simon Messingham (2008)

 

“Sebastiene was human... once. He might look like a nineteenth-century nobleman, but in truth he is a ruthless hunter. He likes nothing more than luring difficult opposition to a planet, then hunting them down for sport. And now he's caught them all - from Zargregs to Moogs, and even the odd Eternal. In fact, Sebastiene is after only one more prize. For this trophy, he knows he is going to need help. He's brought together the finest hunters in the universe to play the most dangerous game for the deadliest quarry of them all. They are hunting for the last of the Time Lords - the Doctor!”

The Doctor Trap is fairly standard original novel, but has a series twists and counter twists which makes it a tad special. I was often reminded how much Sabastiene reminded me of STAR TREK episode The Squire of Gothos, which had an omnipotent being with unlimited powers who basically wants to have some fun. What makes it work is the Doctor having to really struggle, as the odds are really stacked against him. Thus it felt like odds were real and not just clever plot tropes. There is also some deliberate misdirects by Messingham which at times made it difficult to ascertain exactly where the Doctor was. It’s clever, but it can be convoluted. Also, the relationship between Donna and the Doctor is at its weakest here. I’m not sure when Messingham actually started writing this book, but he did not really capture their voices, which is hard one hand, as Catherine Tate and David Tenant have great on screen chemistry and that’s sometimes hard to translate onto page. So I get that, but on the other, Jacqueline Rayner’s Legends of Camelot does a better job. Of course, there are 14 years between these two books, but if there is one thing to be said about these novels that sit outside the TV narrative is some authors are great at capturing the voices of the current or past TARDIS crew while others seemly miss the target.

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