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A '''bottle universe''' was an invention by [[I.M. Foreman]], where the entire contents of a universe are scaled down and placed within a bottle. The creator had some degree of control over the universe, but many aspects took place of their own accord. ([[EDA]]: ''[[Interference - Book One]]'')
A '''bottle universe''', or '''universe-in-a-bottle''', was a highly complex artefact wherein which a [[universe]], with its own physical laws, was contained wholly within a "four-dimensional Klein [[bottle]]" in a more "real" universe. The universe within the bottle could be referred to as a '''micro-universe'''.
==History==
I.M. Foreman created the bottle universe and played with the mechanics of it while on [[Foreman's World]]. It was stolen from her by the [[Time Lord]]s while she and the Doctor slept. ([[EDA]]: ''[[Interference - Book One]]'', ''[[Interference - Book Two]]'')


[[Chris Cwej]] worked for the Time Lords in securing the [[Universe|universe]] in a bottle and opened a gateway for the Time Lords to invade and destroy the bottle universe version of [[1970]] Earth. ([[BNA]]: ''[[Dead Romance]]'')
Some accounts suggested that the [[Virgin reality|reality]] of the [[Seventh Doctor]]'s travels with [[Chris Cwej]] and [[Bernice Summerfield]] and [[the Doctor's reality (The Eight Doctors)|the universe]] of the [[Eighth Doctor]]'s travels with [[Sam Jones]] were distinct bottle universes. After the [[Time Lord]]s of the Eighth Doctor's world placed the bottle containing the Seventh Doctor in the [[Time Vortex]], it began to "leak", causing the two realities to retroactively merge into one continuum.


The Time Lords planned to use the bottle universe as a safe retreat from the Enemy. [[Greyjan the Sane]] proposed the theory that [[the Enemy]] were actually primordial cells that were energized by the leaking bottle. ([[EDA]]: ''[[The Ancestor Cell]]'')
== Nature ==
[[Category:Other realities]]
Rather than all elements within the bottle remaining too microscopic to see from the outside, the physical bottle acted as an interface, able to "zoom in" to anything happening within the bottle universe in accordance with the user's wishes.
[[Category:Theories and concepts]]
 
The owner of a bottle universe had some degree of control over its contents, but many aspects took place of their own accord. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'')
 
Bottle universes could be deliberately created by such forces as [[I.M. Foreman]], who had to draw considerable power from the [[Time Vortex]] to do so, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book Two (novel)|Interference - Book Two]]'') or by the [[All-High God]]s, who jealously guarded the bottle they'd created. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'') However, bottle universes could also occur naturally when [[bubble dimension]]s left the relative dimension in which they spawned, budding off into distinct realities. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Infinite Corridor (comic story)|The Infinite Corridor]]'') The [[Tenth Doctor]] believed that it would be impossible to find someone if they were in a bottle universe as it was born in this way. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Infinite Corridor (comic story)|The Infinite Corridor]]'', ''[[Old Girl (comic story)|Old Girl]]'')
 
A bottle universe's contents would naturally trend towards reflecting the universe in which it had been created, but with a loss of "resolution" the further down the bottle went. If [[Virgin reality|the reality]] of [[Chris Cwej]]'s travels with [[Christine Summerfield]] was a bottle universe, as Christine speculated ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'') and [[I.M. Foreman]] claimed, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') the [[Time Lord]]s of the [[The Doctor's reality (The Eight Doctors)|"higher" universe]] would gain [[god]]like powers within the bottle universe. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'', ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') Christine's bottle was so "low-resolution" that there were no Great Houses or other known extraterrestrial influence on its [[Earth]], and the Great Houses took it over with extreme ease when they entered it. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'')
 
== History ==
=== War in Heaven bottles ===
One set of bottles, whose boundaries were a matter of contention, were of high strategic significance within the [[War in Heaven]].
 
==== I. M. Foreman's bottle ====
[[File:Dimension Riders crop.jpg|thumb|right|The Seventh Doctor of [[Virgin reality|one reality]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dimension Riders (novel)|The Dimesion Riders]]'')]] While on [[Foreman's World]], [[I.M. Foreman]] created a "universe-in-a-bottle" by diverting huge amounts of power from the [[Time Vortex]], sucking in [[Father Kreiner]] along the way. When the [[Eighth Doctor]] visited Foreman's World, he was amazed to see a version of his own [[Seventh Doctor|seventh incarnation]] within [[Virgin reality|the reality]] of the bottle. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') The [[High Council]] of the [[Time Lord]]s acquired the bottle, intending to evacuate their reality into it as a haven from [[the Enemy]] in the oncoming [[War in Heaven]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'', ''[[Interference - Book Two (novel)|Interference - Book Two]]'', ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'') There, they became "almost godlike". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') Within [[Chris Cwej]]'s reality, Christine learned much about mysterious [[All-High God]]s. She came to suspect that they were actually versions of "Cwej's employers" from one universe up, fleeing some great enemy and having acquired immense powers within the bottle. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'') However, there were other possibilities as to the All-High Gods' identity. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'', ''[[The Book of the War (novel)|The Book of the War]]'', ''[[Twilight of the Gods (BNA novel)|Twilight of the Gods]]'')
 
==== The Kings of Space's bottle ====
[[File:Eliza (The Eleven Day Empire).jpg|thumb|left|[[Christine Summerfield|A native]] of the "sub-"bottle universe. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Eleven Day Empire (audio story)|The Eleven Day Empire]]'')]]To Foreman's surprise, the denizens of her bottle universe created a bottle universe of their own, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') specifically the [[Kings of Space]], two of the [[Renegade Time Lord|renegade]] All-High Gods. His "employers", the Great Houses of his reality, told Cwej that the bottle was then stolen by [[the Evil Renegade]], the Great Houses' propaganda-slanted misrepresentation of ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'') the Seventh Doctor. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Original Sin (novel)|Original Sin]]'') After the Houses caught up to him, they acquired the bottle universe for themselves, intending to flee into it to escape war with the the All-High Gods ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'') much as the Time Lords fled from the Enemy. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') This sub-bottle did not contain any Great Houses, and its version of [[Earth]], where [[Christine Summerfield]] was born, was free of extraterrestrial influences until Cwej's employers' arrival. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'')
 
==== Recursion: the Eighth Doctor in a bottle ====
[[File:TARDIS lands in San Francisco.jpg|thumb|right|One version of the [[Seventh Doctor]] landed in [[San Francisco]], precipitating his [[regeneration]] into the [[Eighth Doctor]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Doctor Who (TV story)|Doctor Who]]'')]]However, the situation was more complex than it seemed.
 
While [[Meditation|meditating]] in [[Qixotl]]'s ziggurat on the margins of one of the Eighth Doctor's adventures, [[Kortez]] journeyed into the [[astral plane]] and had a vision of [[the Doctor (Alien Bodies)|a future Doctor wearing a shroud]] who said: "We are all of us living inside the bottle". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Alien Bodies (novel)|Alien Bodies]]'') Just as the Eighth Doctor had seen the Seventh Doctor within Foreman's bottle, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]'') the Seventh Doctor who fought the [[Carnival Queen]] had, within [[the Doctor's TARDIS|his TARDIS]], a bottle in which he saw his bottle-counterpart in [[San Francisco]], ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)|Christmas on a Rational Planet]]'') matching the inception of the Eighth Doctor. ([[TV]]: ''[[Doctor Who (TV story)|Doctor Who]]'') When [[Spring-heeled Jack]] looked into the [[Eighth Doctor]]'s mind, he saw [[Time Lord]]s in "a [[Gallifrey|dull grey world]]" in "a bottle he couldn't wait to break". ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Curious Tale of Spring-Heeled Jack (comic story)|The Curious Tale of Spring-Heeled Jack]]'')
 
==== The bottle breaks ====
{{quote|We are all of us living inside the bottle. And one day, the bottle will break. Then all worlds will be one world. The inside will meet the outside.|[[Kortez]]' astral vision of [[the Doctor (Alien Bodies)|the Doctor]]|Alien Bodies (novel)}}
[[Joseph Kortez|Kortez]]'s vision stated that "one day, the bottle [would] break". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Alien Bodies (novel)|Alien Bodies]]'') Indeed, after the [[Time Lord]]s of the Eighth Doctor's universe stole Foreman's bottle universe, they kept it for safekeeping in the [[Time Vortex]] with plans to possibly colonise it to escape [[the Enemy]]. However, they had failed to consider that the bottle was only designed to keep its universe contained within a three-dimensional environment. Within the environment of the Time Vortex, which was four-dimensional, the contents of the bottle universe, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ancestor Cell (novel)|The Ancestor Cell]]'') originally created by drawing power from the Vortex, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book Two (novel)|Interference - Book Two]]'') leaked back into it, "like throwing an uncorked wine bottie into an ocean at full swell". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ancestor Cell (novel)|The Ancestor Cell]]'')
 
Kortez's vision stated that once the bottle broke, "all worlds [would] be one world. The inside [would] meet the outside". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Alien Bodies (novel)|Alien Bodies]]'') [[Kristeva (The Ancestor Cell)|Kristeva]] heard [[loa]] whispering that the complete mixing of realities was inevitable. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ancestor Cell (novel)|The Ancestor Cell]]'') Indeed, subsequent accounts showed the universe of [[Chris Cwej]] and the [[All-High God]]s as one and the same with that of [[Compassion]] and the [[War in Heaven]]; in fact, ''[[The Book of the War]]'' suggested that the Gods were [[All-High God#Relationship to the Enemy|directly connected]] to the Enemy of the War in Heaven, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Book of the War (novel)|The Book of the War]]'') and [[Christine Summerfield|Eliza]] identifying the Great Houses who'd invaded her home, sub-bottle world with those participating in the War in Heaven. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Eleven Day Empire (audio story)|The Eleven Day Empire]]'')
 
As it broke, the bottle also leaked "untold amounts of unknown energy" into the primary Vortex. The remains of [[the Doctor's TARDIS]], which had been nearly destroyed earlier on, began to calcify around the leaking bottle, using its energy to revive itself and grow into [[The Edifice (The Ancestor Cell)|the Edifice]]. Additionally, [[Greyjan the Sane]] believed that the energies of the bottle allowed [[ancestor cell]]s to grow into shapes unconstrained by established history, allowing them to become the Enemy. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ancestor Cell (novel)|The Ancestor Cell]]'')
 
=== Other bottle universes ===
[[Marnal]] created a bottle universe when trying to discover the fate of [[Gallifrey]] after it had been destroyed. He later used it to track the Doctor through time and to also learn about what kind of person he was and was to become. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Gallifrey Chronicles (novel)|The Gallifrey Chronicles]]'')
 
[[Iris Wildthyme]] once drank from an unmarked bottle and swallowed a whole universe. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Running with Caesars (short story)|Running with Caesars]]'')
 
Stalls at the [[First Auction in Heaven]] sold bottled [[star system]]s as [[paper weight]]s. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Going Once, Going Twice (short story)|Going Once, Going Twice]]'')
 
== Behind the scenes ==
* The concept of a "universe-in-a-bottle" is a play on decorative {{w|impossible bottle|"ships-in-a-bottle"}}, pushing to its farthest imaginable extreme the idea of fitting a large object into a normal-sized bottle. It also connects to the riddle of the goose in a bottle, which is mentioned several times throughout ''[[Interference (novel)|Interference]]''.
* In [[1999 (releases)|1999]], author [[Lawrence Miles]] intended to explain discrepancies between the [[Virgin New Adventures]] and [[BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures]] by establishing that the former series was set in a bottle universe located inside the latter. In his novels ''[[Interference - Book Two (novel)|Interference]]'' and ''[[Dead Romance (novel)|Dead Romance]]'', the [[All-High God|Gods]] menacing [[Bernice Summerfield]] in the VNAs were identified with the Time Lords of the EDAs, fleeing into the bottle universe to escape [[the enemy]], and gaining godlike powers in the process. However, other authors were more willing to cross the continuities. In the foreword to the [[2004 (releases)|2004]] re-release of ''Dead Romance'', Miles admitted that it was a bad idea and rightfully ignored by other authors; this was reaffirmed in ''[[The Book of the War (novel)|The Book of the War]]'', where [[Shift (Alien Bodies)|one of Miles' characters]] commented that though it wasn't sure whether the universes were the same, it didn't ultimately matter.
*The intentionally confusing short story ''Iris Explains'' from the ''[[Missing Pieces]]'' [[charity anthology]] made reference to bottle universes:
{{Quote|Doctor, you had thirteen children with [[Bernice Summerfield|her]], and you don't even - forget I said that. You didn't do that. You didn't even ... oh wait, you did. The once. Or was that in a different bottle altogether? [...] I'll explain later. No, sod that, I never understood all that business with the bottles. Forget the bottles. Forget most of the Bennys. A quick rule of thumb - if she doesn't look like Emma Thompson, you can forget it.|[[Iris Wildthyme]]|[[Missing Pieces]]}}
 
* The concept of bottle universes was referenced in the online collaborative webnovel [[je:Our Strange and Wonderful House (novel)|''Our Strange and Wonderful House'']], where one of the items within the interdimensional [[Jenny Everywhere]] [[je:Jenny Everywhere Museum|Museum]] was [[je:Bottle universe (Our Strange and Wonderful House)|a bottle universe]]. ''Our Strange and Wonderful House'' contained multiple other references to the [[Doctor Who universe|''Doctor Who'' universe]], and [[je:Jeanne Morningstar|the writer]] of the Museum segment would later reference ''[[This Town Will Never Let Us Go (novel)|This Town Will Never Let Us Go]]'' in [[je:The Hermetic Garbage of Jenny Everywhere (novel)|a later ''Jenny Everywhere'' novel]].
 
== External links ==
{{fpx}}
 
[[Category:Universes and dimensions]]
[[Category:Concepts]]
[[Category:Technology in the War in Heaven]]
[[Category:Locations visited by Chris Cwej]]

Latest revision as of 12:20, 15 August 2024

A bottle universe, or universe-in-a-bottle, was a highly complex artefact wherein which a universe, with its own physical laws, was contained wholly within a "four-dimensional Klein bottle" in a more "real" universe. The universe within the bottle could be referred to as a micro-universe.

Some accounts suggested that the reality of the Seventh Doctor's travels with Chris Cwej and Bernice Summerfield and the universe of the Eighth Doctor's travels with Sam Jones were distinct bottle universes. After the Time Lords of the Eighth Doctor's world placed the bottle containing the Seventh Doctor in the Time Vortex, it began to "leak", causing the two realities to retroactively merge into one continuum.

Nature[[edit] | [edit source]]

Rather than all elements within the bottle remaining too microscopic to see from the outside, the physical bottle acted as an interface, able to "zoom in" to anything happening within the bottle universe in accordance with the user's wishes.

The owner of a bottle universe had some degree of control over its contents, but many aspects took place of their own accord. (PROSE: Interference - Book One)

Bottle universes could be deliberately created by such forces as I.M. Foreman, who had to draw considerable power from the Time Vortex to do so, (PROSE: Interference - Book Two) or by the All-High Gods, who jealously guarded the bottle they'd created. (PROSE: Dead Romance) However, bottle universes could also occur naturally when bubble dimensions left the relative dimension in which they spawned, budding off into distinct realities. (COMIC: The Infinite Corridor) The Tenth Doctor believed that it would be impossible to find someone if they were in a bottle universe as it was born in this way. (COMIC: The Infinite Corridor, Old Girl)

A bottle universe's contents would naturally trend towards reflecting the universe in which it had been created, but with a loss of "resolution" the further down the bottle went. If the reality of Chris Cwej's travels with Christine Summerfield was a bottle universe, as Christine speculated (PROSE: Dead Romance) and I.M. Foreman claimed, (PROSE: Interference - Book One) the Time Lords of the "higher" universe would gain godlike powers within the bottle universe. (PROSE: Dead Romance, Interference - Book One) Christine's bottle was so "low-resolution" that there were no Great Houses or other known extraterrestrial influence on its Earth, and the Great Houses took it over with extreme ease when they entered it. (PROSE: Dead Romance)

History[[edit] | [edit source]]

War in Heaven bottles[[edit] | [edit source]]

One set of bottles, whose boundaries were a matter of contention, were of high strategic significance within the War in Heaven.

I. M. Foreman's bottle[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Seventh Doctor of one reality. (PROSE: The Dimesion Riders)

While on Foreman's World, I.M. Foreman created a "universe-in-a-bottle" by diverting huge amounts of power from the Time Vortex, sucking in Father Kreiner along the way. When the Eighth Doctor visited Foreman's World, he was amazed to see a version of his own seventh incarnation within the reality of the bottle. (PROSE: Interference - Book One) The High Council of the Time Lords acquired the bottle, intending to evacuate their reality into it as a haven from the Enemy in the oncoming War in Heaven. (PROSE: Interference - Book One, Interference - Book Two, Dead Romance) There, they became "almost godlike". (PROSE: Interference - Book One) Within Chris Cwej's reality, Christine learned much about mysterious All-High Gods. She came to suspect that they were actually versions of "Cwej's employers" from one universe up, fleeing some great enemy and having acquired immense powers within the bottle. (PROSE: Dead Romance) However, there were other possibilities as to the All-High Gods' identity. (PROSE: Dead Romance, The Book of the War, Twilight of the Gods)

The Kings of Space's bottle[[edit] | [edit source]]

A native of the "sub-"bottle universe. (AUDIO: The Eleven Day Empire)

To Foreman's surprise, the denizens of her bottle universe created a bottle universe of their own, (PROSE: Interference - Book One) specifically the Kings of Space, two of the renegade All-High Gods. His "employers", the Great Houses of his reality, told Cwej that the bottle was then stolen by the Evil Renegade, the Great Houses' propaganda-slanted misrepresentation of (PROSE: Dead Romance) the Seventh Doctor. (PROSE: Original Sin) After the Houses caught up to him, they acquired the bottle universe for themselves, intending to flee into it to escape war with the the All-High Gods (PROSE: Dead Romance) much as the Time Lords fled from the Enemy. (PROSE: Interference - Book One) This sub-bottle did not contain any Great Houses, and its version of Earth, where Christine Summerfield was born, was free of extraterrestrial influences until Cwej's employers' arrival. (PROSE: Dead Romance)

Recursion: the Eighth Doctor in a bottle[[edit] | [edit source]]

One version of the Seventh Doctor landed in San Francisco, precipitating his regeneration into the Eighth Doctor. (TV: Doctor Who)

However, the situation was more complex than it seemed.

While meditating in Qixotl's ziggurat on the margins of one of the Eighth Doctor's adventures, Kortez journeyed into the astral plane and had a vision of a future Doctor wearing a shroud who said: "We are all of us living inside the bottle". (PROSE: Alien Bodies) Just as the Eighth Doctor had seen the Seventh Doctor within Foreman's bottle, (PROSE: Interference - Book One) the Seventh Doctor who fought the Carnival Queen had, within his TARDIS, a bottle in which he saw his bottle-counterpart in San Francisco, (PROSE: Christmas on a Rational Planet) matching the inception of the Eighth Doctor. (TV: Doctor Who) When Spring-heeled Jack looked into the Eighth Doctor's mind, he saw Time Lords in "a dull grey world" in "a bottle he couldn't wait to break". (COMIC: The Curious Tale of Spring-Heeled Jack)

The bottle breaks[[edit] | [edit source]]

We are all of us living inside the bottle. And one day, the bottle will break. Then all worlds will be one world. The inside will meet the outside.Kortez' astral vision of the Doctor [Alien Bodies (novel) [src]]

Kortez's vision stated that "one day, the bottle [would] break". (PROSE: Alien Bodies) Indeed, after the Time Lords of the Eighth Doctor's universe stole Foreman's bottle universe, they kept it for safekeeping in the Time Vortex with plans to possibly colonise it to escape the Enemy. However, they had failed to consider that the bottle was only designed to keep its universe contained within a three-dimensional environment. Within the environment of the Time Vortex, which was four-dimensional, the contents of the bottle universe, (PROSE: The Ancestor Cell) originally created by drawing power from the Vortex, (PROSE: Interference - Book Two) leaked back into it, "like throwing an uncorked wine bottie into an ocean at full swell". (PROSE: The Ancestor Cell)

Kortez's vision stated that once the bottle broke, "all worlds [would] be one world. The inside [would] meet the outside". (PROSE: Alien Bodies) Kristeva heard loa whispering that the complete mixing of realities was inevitable. (PROSE: The Ancestor Cell) Indeed, subsequent accounts showed the universe of Chris Cwej and the All-High Gods as one and the same with that of Compassion and the War in Heaven; in fact, The Book of the War suggested that the Gods were directly connected to the Enemy of the War in Heaven, (PROSE: The Book of the War) and Eliza identifying the Great Houses who'd invaded her home, sub-bottle world with those participating in the War in Heaven. (AUDIO: The Eleven Day Empire)

As it broke, the bottle also leaked "untold amounts of unknown energy" into the primary Vortex. The remains of the Doctor's TARDIS, which had been nearly destroyed earlier on, began to calcify around the leaking bottle, using its energy to revive itself and grow into the Edifice. Additionally, Greyjan the Sane believed that the energies of the bottle allowed ancestor cells to grow into shapes unconstrained by established history, allowing them to become the Enemy. (PROSE: The Ancestor Cell)

Other bottle universes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Marnal created a bottle universe when trying to discover the fate of Gallifrey after it had been destroyed. He later used it to track the Doctor through time and to also learn about what kind of person he was and was to become. (PROSE: The Gallifrey Chronicles)

Iris Wildthyme once drank from an unmarked bottle and swallowed a whole universe. (PROSE: Running with Caesars)

Stalls at the First Auction in Heaven sold bottled star systems as paper weights. (PROSE: Going Once, Going Twice)

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The concept of a "universe-in-a-bottle" is a play on decorative "ships-in-a-bottle", pushing to its farthest imaginable extreme the idea of fitting a large object into a normal-sized bottle. It also connects to the riddle of the goose in a bottle, which is mentioned several times throughout Interference.
  • In 1999, author Lawrence Miles intended to explain discrepancies between the Virgin New Adventures and BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures by establishing that the former series was set in a bottle universe located inside the latter. In his novels Interference and Dead Romance, the Gods menacing Bernice Summerfield in the VNAs were identified with the Time Lords of the EDAs, fleeing into the bottle universe to escape the enemy, and gaining godlike powers in the process. However, other authors were more willing to cross the continuities. In the foreword to the 2004 re-release of Dead Romance, Miles admitted that it was a bad idea and rightfully ignored by other authors; this was reaffirmed in The Book of the War, where one of Miles' characters commented that though it wasn't sure whether the universes were the same, it didn't ultimately matter.
  • The intentionally confusing short story Iris Explains from the Missing Pieces charity anthology made reference to bottle universes:

Doctor, you had thirteen children with her, and you don't even - forget I said that. You didn't do that. You didn't even ... oh wait, you did. The once. Or was that in a different bottle altogether? [...] I'll explain later. No, sod that, I never understood all that business with the bottles. Forget the bottles. Forget most of the Bennys. A quick rule of thumb - if she doesn't look like Emma Thompson, you can forget it.Iris Wildthyme [[[Missing Pieces]] [src]]

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]