The Turing Test (novel): Difference between revisions
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-publisher( *?)=( *?)\[\[(.*?)\]\] +publisher\1=\2\3)) |
MystExplorer (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 54: | Line 54: | ||
{{EDA}} | {{EDA}} | ||
{{TitleSort}} | {{TitleSort}} | ||
[[Category:EDA novels]] | [[Category:EDA novels]] | ||
[[Category:2000 novels]] | [[Category:2000 novels]] | ||
Line 66: | Line 65: | ||
[[Category:Stories set in 1944]] | [[Category:Stories set in 1944]] | ||
[[Category:Stories set in World War II]] | [[Category:Stories set in World War II]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Pseudo-historical stories]] |
Revision as of 17:19, 6 February 2014
The Turing Test was the thirty-ninth novel in the BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures series. It was written by Paul Leonard.
Publisher's summary
The Second World War is drawing to a close. Alan Turing, the code-breaker who has been critical to the allied war effort, is called in to break a mysterious new cypher. It's coming from Germany, and everyone assumes it is German — everyone except Turing's new friend, the Doctor, indeed it seems the Doctor knows too much about the code and the code-makers — and when people start to die, even Turing wonders it the Doctor is the one to blame.
Graham Greene, novelist and spymaster, has also encountered the Doctor, and thinks he's a rum enough chap, but in a remote African village he has encountered something far stranger.
To find out the truth, they must all cross the front line and travel through occupied Germany — right into the firing line of the bloodiest war in history. What they find there has no human explanation — and only the Doctor has the answers. Or maybe, they're just more questions...
Characters
- Eighth Doctor
- Graham Greene
- Alan Turing
- Joseph Heller
- Colonel Herbert Elgar
- Bernard
- Cray
- Daria
- Horatio Elgar
- Hugh Alexander
- White
References
- The Eighth Doctor is ambidextrous, like his previous incarnation.
Notes
- This is the third story in the "Earth Arc".
Continuity
- According to the Remembrance of the Daleks novelisation, Rachel Jensen helped Alan Turing with his wartime research.
External links
- The Turing Test at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Discontinuity Guide to: The Turing Test at The Whoniverse