Short Trips: Defining Patterns: Difference between revisions
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| ''[[One Card for the Curious]]'' || [[Xanna Eve Chown]] ||[[Seventh Doctor]], [[Ace]] | | ''[[One Card for the Curious]]'' || [[Xanna Eve Chown]] ||[[Seventh Doctor]], [[Ace]] | ||
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| ''[[Séance (short story)|Séance]]'' || [[John Davies (writer)|John Davies]] ||[[Seventh Doctor]], [[Ace]] | | ''[[Séance, or Smoking is Highly Addictive, Don't Start (short story)|Séance, or Smoking is Highly Addictive, Don't Start]]'' || [[John Davies (writer)|John Davies]] ||[[Seventh Doctor]], [[Ace]] | ||
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| ''[[The Celestial Harmony Engine]]'' || [[Ian Briggs]] ||[[Seventh Doctor]] | | ''[[The Celestial Harmony Engine]]'' || [[Ian Briggs]] ||[[Seventh Doctor]] |
Revision as of 02:11, 7 July 2017
Short Trips: Defining Patterns was the twenty-third Short Trips anthology published by Big Finish Productions.
Publisher's summary
The known universe is home to countless trillions of lives, all interweaving with each other and affecting the line of history. When someone makes a decision, no matter how significant or seemingly irrelevant, they cause unknown effects throughout the ages...
Perhaps other, unreachable, factors are at play too: does the universe have a destiny? Are we all predetermined to follow a particular path? Do we reap what we sow or is it a case of what will be will be? Are coincidences really just that, or do we miss their deeper meanings?
Everywhere he looks, the Doctor sees the same patterns — the same events, decisions and actions cropping up again and again. Look at the bigger picture, however, and maybe — just maybe — you'll see how the universe works. How the universe lives...
But, as the Doctor and his companions discover, are these patterns really there? Or do we, by the very nature of seeing them, define them?
Individual stories
Notes
- Michael Coen was the winner of a competition run by Big Finish to find new writing talent.
Audio release
An audio version of Lepidoptery for Beginners, read by Duncan Wisbey, was recorded by Big Finish Productions and released as a free download for subscribers in October 2010, alongside A Death in the Family.[1] Additionally, a reading of Twilight's End by Beth Chalmers was released to subscribers whose subscription included Robophobia in August 2011.