Killing Ground (novel): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-publisher( *?)=( *?)\[\[(.*?)\]\] +publisher\1=\2\3))
Line 11: Line 11:
|setting= [[Agora]], [[2191]]  
|setting= [[Agora]], [[2191]]  
|writer= [[Steve Lyons]]  
|writer= [[Steve Lyons]]  
|publisher= [[Virgin Books]]
|publisher= Virgin Books  
|release date= [[20 June (releases)|20 June]] [[1996 (releases)|1996]]  
|release date= [[20 June (releases)|20 June]] [[1996 (releases)|1996]]  
|format= Paperback Book, 256 Pages  
|format= Paperback Book, 256 Pages  

Revision as of 00:15, 14 January 2014

RealWorld.png

Killing Ground was the twenty-third novel in the Virgin Missing Adventures series. It was written by Steve Lyons. It featured the Sixth Doctor and Grant Markham in his second and final appearance in a novel. This is the only Missing Adventures novel to feature the Cybermen and it is only one of two novels published under Virgin Publishing's control of the Doctor Who licence. The other is PROSE: Iceberg.

Publisher's summary

"Imagine that you can live forever and life is totally free from pain. You can see all things with clarity, unblinkered by irrelevant details. You will never fear, never sicken, never lose control. That is what the Cybermen are offering."

The Doctor takes his new companion, Grant, back home to Agora -- only to find a world in the thrall of some of his oldest and deadliest foes.

The Cybermen have taken control and set up a breeding colony to propagate their own race. While the Doctor languishes in a cell at the mercy of the sadistic Overseers, Grant joins up with a group of rebels and works on a desperate rescue bid.

With time running out, the rebels move into action. But will their solution prove more deadly than the problem itself?

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

Biologically modified species

  • Ted Henneker helps create the Bronze Knights, cybernetically augmented volunteers designed to match the strength of a Cyberman in combat.

Cybermen

  • Hegelia is an expert on Cyberhistory. She is one of the most respected ArcHivists from the ArcHive.
  • ArcHivist Hegelia undergoes the Cyber-conversion process to satisfy her curiosity about what the process feels like. She loses all interest in the question and destroys her notes following her total conversion.
  • Cybermen are CyberNomads who were affected by the war with Voga and consequently have more organic components than any other model since the CyberMondasians. They use artificial emotional responses to intimidate opponents. They can swim.
  • Cyber-leaders can send out a disabling pulse to all Cyber-technology upon death.

The Doctor

  • The Doctor contemplates suicide.
  • The Doctor spends weeks in the TARDIS recovering from radiation poisoning sustained on board the Selacian warcraft.
  • The Doctor is very good at resisting torture, and enjoys mocking his interrogator.

Individuals

  • The Doctor does not have much faith in his new companion Grant.
  • Grant Markham has severe robophobia brought upon by early childhood memories of the Cybermen.
  • Jean Markham was Grant's mother. She was shot dead by the Cybermen as punishment for the colony.
  • Ben Taggart was Grant's father. He surrendered instead of sacrificing himself to detonate a bomb in Population Control.
  • Ted Henneker leads the Agoran rebels.
  • Arthur Lakesmith was the original rebel leader. He was mutilated as a warning to other colonists following a failed rebellion in 2176.

Notes

Continuity

External links

prose stub