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Parallel 59

(Book #30 in the Eighth Doctor Adventures Series)

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Book Overview

When an outpost in space begins to break up, with the TARDIS crew aboard, escape is only possible in tiny life-capsules. Fitz is bundled unconscious into one, while the Doctor and Compassion take... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Where Fritz enters a leisure hive of his own creation

Hey! A Doctor Who novel written by a woman! That doesn't happen too often, Kate Orman aside, so it's kind of worth pointing out even if it doesn't really speak to the quality of the book or the lack thereof (Orman's books tend to stand out not because she's a lady but because hers tend to be really good) . . . interestingly enough, we get a fairly standard Who adventure here, not so much formulaic as nothing spectacular. Entertaining without being exciting. Perhaps I should explain. Landing entirely by accident in a space station that is governed by a cybernetic entity and containing many people kept in suspended animation, things go wrong immediately and the team gets separated before the story even properly starting, with the Doctor and Compassion winding up on the planet and captured by the people running the facility and poor Fitz winding up in a perfect world with other people who are all there to relax and be cool. On the planet, the Doctor and Compassion start to unravel the intricacies of this world, which is obsessed with furthering itself in a space race (and is in competition with several other Parallels) and thus winds up being somewhat paranoid, with practically everyone suspecting him of being an alien (they're right, as it turns out, but for the wrong reasons) and alternating between attempting to interrogate him or wanting to execute him. Just another day at the office, really. Meanwhile, Fitz begins to sleep his way through the colony. I'm only half-kidding, as he begins to take apart the mystery of where he is and what it all means. Given this description, you can probably guess that Fitz isn't actually on a colony and this will not end well, and its to the authors' credit that they manage to construct a society in less than three hundred pages that has a scope beyond what we see on the page. The Skale are nuts in some respect but it's a logical kind of nuts and once you accept that logic you begin to see why they're not real balanced. There's all these little components parts that would probably fall apart under close examination but work for the purposes of the story. Then you do what Doctor Who generally does best, which is drop the Doctor and his pals into a currently running but somewhat tenuous situation and allow him to run amok as best he can. As only he can, really. Given this situation, it's still not surprising that it's less than exciting in parts. The early scenes with the Doctor dueling with the station dwellers, toying with them in and aggravating them at the same time while trying to find out as much information as he can, are interesting in watching this Doctor probe and prod without being overt about it (or so overt that they think he's just kidding). Especially when we don't know much about the situation. But we get to a point of diminishing returns and eventually the story devolves into the various people on the station trying to double cross or one-up one another because everyone is paranoi

The Doctor and Compassion get their kit off!

Escaping from a doomed space station, the Doctor and Compassion splash down in the waters of the planet Skale. Fitz, as per usual, has gone his own way, and arrives on the pleasant world of Mechta. Compassion and the Doctor are not so lucky, as they are captured by Parallel 59, owners of the orbital station. The Skalens are a paranoid, competitive bunch who have divided their planet into seemingly arbitrary power blocs. In contrast, the Mechtans are chilled, relaxing in convalescence. Fitz literally becomes immersed in their culture. So Fitz once more acts the playboy, where his only anxiety is keeping each of his lovers unaware of the others. But is there really something sinister in Central, as Fitz's circle would have him believe? And what's happening to the people who leave Mechta? Convinced that they're from another planet, Haltiel, the Skalens set about interrogating the Doctor and Compassion. But the denizens of Parallel 59 are very politically charged, and some of them don't want the Doctor to repair the damage to the space station (which had unwittingly been caused by the Doctor and friends). Compassion escapes, and finds the obligatory band of rebels. However, she and the Doctor are marooned, forced to leave the TARDIS behind in the space station. Not only must the Doctor recover his beloved time machine, but he must also save Fitz from the true nightmare of Mechta...This is the first novel by the editor of the BBC books, Stephen Cole, and it looks as though it could have been a real disaster, a case of too many chefs (Peter Anghelides is acknowledged to have helped out also). But Anghelides seems to have carried on with the most effective device of the previous novel (his own 'Frontier Worlds'), by having Fitz narrate his time in Mechta. This again brings us closer to Fitz, a character who had previously seemed lifeless. There's nowhere near the same level of wit as in Frontier Worlds, and Parallel 59 appears to be quite formulaic (how many cultures has Fitz lived in now?), and Compassion seems to bear a gun as unthinkingly as any Ace (but without the same gung-ho). The opening's also quite dull, as we're told about the dramatic escape from the space station, rather than being shown it. This adventure is also the first to feature an unclothed Doctor, but this sight doesn't seem to faze his cell companion, Compassion, so we must assume that the Doctor is fully humanoid in appearance (no hidden appendages like the Centauri in B5). But then it's hard to see Compassion reacting to anything much.There is a point in the novel where all the plots and counterplots seem facile, but there's an even bigger twist towards the end. And this novel's conclusion is it's real saviour, for it is genuinely pulsating. If you go and reread the opening pages, you do realise that there are subtle signposts to what's going to happen. With three authors contributing, Parallel 59 could have been a disaster. It's a triumph that a clear narrative emerges, and the

A dark, but fun, installment

This is the first novel by both series editor Stephen Cole and co-author Natalie Dallaire, and it's a good, fun, straightforward science fiction adventure. Slightly reminiscent of the previous book, Frontier Worlds, in tone, this book begins in media res, with the Doctor and Compassion separated from Fitz early on. Fitz winds up in utopian Mechta, while the Doctor and Compassion find themselves on the planet Skale, where power blocs called Parallels are engaged in a tenuous, paranoid cold war. Specifically, they end up in Parallel 59 (no surprise there), which keeps the population in the dark about other Parallels much like the society in 1984. Can the Doctor and Compassion uncover 59's Big Secret Project and its connection to Mechta? Does a duck quack?Ordinarily, I have trouble with books that introduce an alien society. Just trying to remember all those alien names and picture what everything is supposed to look like gives me a headache. The authors keep things fairly straightforward and recognizable here, which allowed me to concentrate on the story and characters. They did a particularly good job bringing the Doctor and Compassion to life, and Fitz's portrayal was a logical extension of the character we've seen in other books. The supporting cast is likeable, particularly the people in Mechta.The only real letdown came after I'd finished the book and thought about it. Once the Big Secret Project's secret is revealed, it's never really explained why anyone would go to that much trouble in the first place. At that point, though, the story was moving so quickly that I didn't notice it at the time.Doctor Who fans who prefer stories that play with the formula more, like those by Lawrence Miles or Paul Magrs, may find this book a little too straightforward for their tastes. For those who just want an entertaining Doctor Who story, this should fill the bill quite nicely.
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