For Donna Noble, the Andromeda galaxy is a long, long way from home. But even two-and-a-half-million light years from Earth, danger lurks around every corner… A visit to an art gallery turns into a race across space to uncover the secret behind a shadowy organization.
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High-octane spaceship and robot fuelled action in a distant galaxy Barcode: 9781846075575`Shining Darkness’ presents Doctor Who at it’s most `sci-fi’, right from the start plunging us into a galaxy far removed from our own. The central theme of this book revolves around robots – or `mechanicals’ as they are also known in this book – presenting on one hand the obvious typical sci-fi techy stuff involving them, while equally developing a strong moral message which becomes the backbone to this story.With the Doctor and Donna separated early on, we follow two groups – one of them strongly anti-machines, the other group opposed to them trying to uncover their sinister plan and stop them. It’s not long before we are swept off into a frantic planet-hopping scramble as the classic `collecting all the pieces of an artefact’ storyline is expanded into an epic scale.With it’s various planets and spaceship chases/battles, this book has the feel of a Hollywood action thriller, a full on space opera that moves along at a fantastic pace. One thing that is so good about the Doctor Who novels is that they are free from the budget constraints of the TV show and this is no better demonstrated than here, especially in the epic finale.The Doctor and Donna are excellently characterised, free from the overuse of personality cliché’s copied from TV series that sometimes afflicts the New Series Adventures books. That said, this book isn’t entirely free of cliché’s as the `comedy robot duo’ archetype crops up halfway through the book. The majority of the book’s various protagonists are interesting and well-developed though and all in all, everything in this book comes together fantastically – definitely worth a read if you are a Who fan.
Donna Noble Rocks! This is probably the best of the Dr Who novels to feature Donna. Her character is captured brilliantly and you can hear Catherine T saying the lines. Highlight has to be the Pythonesque/Hitchikery section in the middle of the book where Donna is mistaken for The Ginger Goddess. Laugh out loud funny. And the overall story`s good one too, concerning the usual notions of artificial intelligence/conscience but in a fresh & entertaining way. Buy it!
The (Holy) Chicken of Doubt – a review of the hardback AND the audiobook as Amazon have listed them as the same item Mark Michalowski’s second original Doctor Who novel for BBC books is also the second to feature the most recent TV pairing of The Tenth Doctor and loudmouthed temp from Chiswick, Donna Noble.Michalowski injects new life into well-worn sci-fi themes such as: Man versus machine, the sentience of robots, and the deification of unwitting humans who arrive unexpectedly on alien worlds.The story suffers initially from the cramming-in of too many characters, and consequently the first few chapters are somewhat muddled. Fortunately, as the book progresses the tale becomes sparer and more focused, resulting in a darkly humorous adventure which sees the time-traveller and his companion quickly separated, and individually become involved with two factions who both seek to uncover the secrets behind the eponymous `Cult of Shining Darkness’.There are moments of Douglas Adams-esque whimsy throughout the book, most notably in the facetious depiction of the fickle `Jaftee’ who treat gods like fashions, and Donna’s hilarious self-styling as `The Ginger Goddess’; a cunning ruse to escape The Jaftee – and one which promptly backfires.I have found the pairing of The Doctor and Donna to be the one that works best on TV and in the novels it is just the same. The trick of separating the pair early on works well, just as in the previous novel in the range: `The Doctor Trap’. The book also works well on many levels and could be enjoyed by both young and old; diehard fan and casual reader. This is the key to the success of the parent series Doctor Who as well as its spin-off `The Sarah-Jane Adventures’; as long as the writers continue to bear this in mind and write accordingly, the possibilities are endless…The audiobook, read by Debbie Chazen (Foon Van Hoff in 2007 Christmas special ‘Voyage of the Damned’), retains much of the novel’s charm – despite being abridged – but still works better as a book than a CD.