Product Details
Doctor Who: Independence Day

Doctor Who: Independence Day
By Peter Darvill-Evans

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Product Description

With Ace drugged by a slave-trader, the Doctor is on his own, attempting to liberate the Mendeb slaves and lead them in a revolt against the emperor Vathran.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #760419 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-10-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 285 pages

Customer Reviews

Starts off promisingly, but then...2
"Independence Day" was a book I looked forward to for quite a while, but for a variety of reasons only recently got around to reading it.

Having read Darvill-Evans previous entry into the New Adventures series "Deceit" and finding highly enjoyable at the time - sometime in early 1993 - this was a huge disappointment.

The book starts out quite promisingly with a brief prologue featuring the underused Second Doctor and Jamie before proceeding to the main action with the Seventh Doctor and Ace. These early parts where the Doctor and Ace are together are actually quite good, but when the traditional device of splitting the Doctor from his companion occurs, that is where the problems begin.

The Doctor travels to this world which is populated by poorly characterised natives and evil oppressors who take these natives. I say natives, but they're actually human colonists who've been left on the planet when a corporation left them behind a considerable amount of time ago.

Ace's story begins on a space station and ends up with her being shipped into slavery. This whole storyline was unintersting and the characterisation of Ace was to say the least not good. Darvill-Evans in his characterisation of her goes for the early New Adventure approach and her character seems to be pre Love And War and doesn't really fit in with the way that the BBC Books have approached the character in the previous Seventh Doctor books. It also doesn't really seem to fit in with that New Adventure Ace. Therefore if this is a follow up to the last BBC Seventh Doctor adventure Prime Time, the changes in her character seem very drastic compared to how she was previously. But if Darvill-Evans has tried to create a Missing New Adventure then he hasn't succeded in capturing the right character either.

The plot moves very slowly and after about a hundred pages I felt like giving up with the novel. The other characters in the book are instantly forgettable.

Overall "Independence Day" is not a total failure. There are some good points to it, but unfortunately they are totally outweighed by the negative ones. This is a shame, because "Deceit" was good. Perhaps if he writes another for the BBC range he could bring back the character he brought to the printed page in "Deceit" - Abslom Daak - Dalek Killer. A character such as that would have helped "Independence Day" to become something better. Not the worst BBC Book ... but not a vintage entry which is a shame as the previous Doctor novels had become very consistent in terms of quality over the last year.

Poor show1
Darvill-Evans was the power behind the first original Who novels, and I expected far far more from him than this. It feels as though it has been written by a robot for one of the old World Distributors Annuals. After Mike Tucker and Robert Perry's superb 7th Dr books this is a severe letdown. You can't win them all though.

below average2
After coming after the 4 brillient 7th doc books writen by Robert Perry, and Mike Tucker (illegal alien,matrix,storm havest, and primetime) This was a sad disapointment, I awaited the realise of this book with great hope, as I really enjoy the relationship between Ace and the Doctor.

It may have been important for the plot to work to have ace drugged, and out of the scene for the most, but that lead to the failure of the book.

What we did see of ace, we saw a 2d ace. The dark secrets, and evil of the 7th doctor we saw in matrix just wasn't here. Back is the tacky, sad 'depressed' doctor from the middle of the new adventures.

Roll on Mike Tuckers next book, lets hope he brings the doctor back to life