Timewyrm: Genesys (novel): Difference between revisions

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* Ace mentions ''[[Watership Down]]''.
* Ace mentions ''[[Watership Down]]''.
* Avram mentions [[Shulpae]] and [[Ninsun]].
* Avram mentions [[Shulpae]] and [[Ninsun]].
* En-gula mentions [[Nisaba]] and [[Ennugi]].
* En-gula mentions [[Nisaba]], [[Enki]] and [[Ennugi]].
* Agga mentions [[Nergal]].
* Agga mentions [[Nergal]].
* Gilgamesh mentions [[Lugulbanda]].
* Gilgamesh mentions [[Lugulbanda]].

Revision as of 22:35, 14 May 2019

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prose stub

Timewyrm: Genesys was the first novel in the New Adventures series. It was written by John Peel. It was the first book in the Timewyrm story arc, and featured the Seventh Doctor and Ace.

Publisher's summary

Mesopotamia — the cradle of civilisation. In the fertile crescent of land on the banks of the rivers Tigris and Euphrates, mankind is turning from hunter gatherer into farmer, and from farmer into city-dweller.

Gilgamesh, the first hero-king, rules the city of Uruk. An equally legendary figure arrives, in a police telephone box: the TARDIS has brought the Doctor and his companion Ace to witness the first steps of mankind's long progress to the stars.

And from somewhere amid those distant points of light an evil sentience has tumbled. To her followers in the city of Kish she is known as Ishtar the goddess; to the Doctor's forebears on ancient Gallifrey she was a mythical terror — the Timewyrm.

Plot

Preface

An illustration for the preface, printed in DWM 175.

A spacecraft, holding the mysterious Timewyrm, drifts into Mutter's Spiral. The Timewyrm is possessing the crew, but kills them all when they frustrate her. She plans to set up a slave world on Earth, but soon realises the ship is falling apart. As she meets her apparent death, she can only see the irony in this.

Characters

References

Foods and beverages

Galaxies

Species

Songs

  • Ace sings Irish folk songs.

Notes

  • This is the first novel in the Timewyrm four-novel series.
  • Although there had been several original novels and novellas published based upon the Whoniverse but not featuring the Doctor, and also several novelisations of unproduced Doctor Who stories, this was the first long-form original publication to feature the Doctor himself since the publication of the novella Doctor Who and the Invasion from Space in 1966.
  • The Doctor's first line in the Virgin New Adventures series is; "Didn't I tell you not to do that?"
  • This is also the first officially licensed novel featuring the Doctor to ever exceed 200 pages in length. The only official Doctor Who-related novel to exceed this milestone before this point was Turlough and the Earthlink Dilemma, in which the Doctor did not appear.
  • The book's adult content in terms of language and sexuality was initially controversial with fans.
  • Andrew Skilleter created the cover art.
  • John Peel sets up an explanation for future writers to use, regarding continuity errors, by having the Doctor erase his less important memories.

Continuity

External links