Killing Ground (novel): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
 
(73 intermediate revisions by 32 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{title dab away}}
{{real world}}
{{real world}}
{{title dab away}}
{{Infobox Story SMW
{{Infobox Story
|image           = Ma-23.jpg
|name= Killing Ground
|range          = Virgin Missing Adventures
|image= Ma-23.jpg  
|number in range = 23
|series=[[Virgin Missing Adventures]]
|number          = 23
|number= 23  
|doctor         = Sixth Doctor
|doctor=Sixth Doctor  
|companions     = [[Grant Markham|Grant]]
|companions= [[Grant Markham|Grant]]  
|enemy           = [[CyberNomad]]s
|enemy= The [[Cyberman (Mondas)| Cybermen]]  
|setting         = [[Agora]], [[2191]]
|setting= [[Mars]] orbit, [[2100]]<br>[[Agora]], [[2191]]  
|writer         = Steve Lyons
|writer= [[Steve Lyons]]  
|cover          = [[Alister Pearson]]
|publisher= Virgin Books  
|publisher       = Virgin Books
|release date= [[20 June (releases)|20 June]] [[1996 (releases)|1996]]
|release date   = 20 June 1996
|format= Paperback Book, 256 Pages  
|format         = Paperback Book; 16 Chapters, 256 Pages
|isbn= ISBN 0-426-20474-3
|isbn           = ISBN 0-426-20474-3
|prev=The Sands of Time (novel)
|series          = [[Virgin Missing Adventures]]
|next= The Scales of Injustice (novel) }}
|prev           = The Sands of Time (novel)
'''''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 (novel)|Iceberg]]''.
|next           = The Scales of Injustice (novel)
}}
{{prose stub}}
{{you may|Killing Ground (comic story)|n1=the comic story of the same name}}
'''''Killing Ground''''' was the twenty-third novel in the [[Virgin Missing Adventures]] series. Continuing on from the final events of author [[Steve Lyons]]' ''[[Time of Your Life (novel)|Time of Your Life]]'', it showed what happened when the [[Sixth Doctor]] gave [[Grant Markham]] his "one trip" in [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] — a journey back to Markham's home of [[Agora]].
 
Unlike ''Time'', however, ''Ground'' featured Markham as a prominent narrative element, and the book jacket formally dubbed him a "[[companion]]". Still, it proved to be his final outing in a licensed work, despite the fact that it ended in a way that promised more adventures for Markham and the Doctor.
 
Notably, it was one of only three novels published under [[Virgin Publishing]]'s control of the ''Doctor Who'' licence to feature the [[Cyberman|Cybermen]]. The others were ''[[The Crystal Bucephalus (novel)|The Crystal Bucephalus]]'' and ''[[Iceberg (novel)|Iceberg]]''.


== Publisher's summary ==
== 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 [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]] are offering."
:"Imagine that you can [[Immortality|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 [[sickness|sicken]], never lose control. That is what the [[Cyberman|Cybermen]] are offering."


[[Sixth Doctor|The Doctor]] takes his new [[companion]], [[Grant Markham|Grant]], back home to [[Agora]] -- only to find a world in the thrall of some of his oldest and deadliest foes.
[[Sixth Doctor|The Doctor]] takes his new [[companion]], [[Grant Markham|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 [[Overseer]]s, Grant joins up with a group of rebels and works on a desperate rescue bid.
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 [[Overseer (Killing Ground)|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?
With time running out, the rebels move into action. But will their solution prove more deadly than the problem itself?


== Plot ==
== Plot ==
''to be added''
Ninety-one [[year]]s in [[Grant Markham]]'s past, the ''[[New Hope]]'' successfully launches from [[Earth]]. The [[Sixth Doctor]] and Grant observe the launch from inside [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]], which is [[orbit]]ing [[Mars]]. The Doctor comments that the ''New Hope'' will travel to the [[Centraxis system]], and its [[crew]] will establish "the most remote of the [[prototype]] [[Colony|colonies]]", which Grant immediately identifies as [[Agora]], his [[planet]] of origin. The Doctor comments that with [[human]]ity now beginning to expand into [[space]], the numerous [[alien]] threats that Earth's [[government]]s have kept secret for [[Century|centuries]] will be eager to exact [[revenge]] on humanity at a [[time]] in which humans will be less equipped to fight them. However, he confirms that the ''New Hope'' will arrive safely. Meanwhile, the majority of the ''New Hope''<nowiki/>'s [[Administrative Council]] [[Voting|votes]] in favour of establishing a more primitive [[society]] on their new [[home]], and eschewing the advanced [[technology]] of Earth.
 
In the midst of a [[rebellion]] on Agora, [[Ben Taggart]] flees from [[Population Control]], having been driven out, along with the other surviving rebels, by the [[Cyberman|Cybermen]]. Falling over in the [[mud]], he eventually gets up, believing the fighting to have passed him, only to be confronted by a Cyberman; the creature is shot [[death|dead]], however, by [[Arthur Lakesmith]], the [[leader]] of the rebellion against the Cybermen, who forces Taggart to accompany him back inside Population Control with a crude [[bomb]], with the intention of blowing up the entire complex and potentially the [[Cyber-ship (Killing Ground)|Cyber-ship]]. However, inside the complex, the duo are attacked by more Cybermen, one of whom brutally maims Lakesmith, forcing Taggart to take the bomb and detonate it himself. Taggart flees, but is trapped by two Cybermen within an [[Overseer (Killing Ground)|Overseers]]' rest area, preventing him from reaching the control centre. [[Fear]]fully contemplating that detonating the bomb, and [[Self-sacrifice|sacrificing]] himself, here, may end up being for nothing, he places the bomb on the floor and [[surrender]]s.
 
''More to be added''


== Characters ==
== Characters ==
Line 36: Line 49:
* [[Jean Markham]]
* [[Jean Markham]]
* [[Ted Henneker]]
* [[Ted Henneker]]
* ArcHivist [[Hegelia]]
* [[Hegelia]]
* ArcHivist [[Graduand Jolarr]]
* [[Graduand Jolarr]]
* [[Arthur Lakesmith]]
* [[Arthur Lakesmith]]
* [[Ben Taggart]]
* [[Ben Taggart]]
* [[Madrox]]
* [[Vincent Madrox]]
* [[Maxine Carter]]
* [[Maxine Carter]]
* [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]]
* [[Cyberman|Cybermen]]


== References ==
== Worldbuilding ==
=== Biologically modified species ===
=== Biologically modified species ===
*Ted Henneker helps create the [[Bronze Knight]]s, cybernetically augmented volunteers designed to match the strength of a Cyberman in combat.
* [[Ted Henneker]] helps create the [[Bronze Knight]]s.


=== Cybermen ===
=== Cybermen ===
* [[Hegelia]] is an expert on Cyberhistory. She is one of the most respected ArcHivists from the [[ArcHive]].
* [[Hegelia]] is an expert on the [[history]] of the [[Cyberman|Cybermen]]. She is one of the most respected [[ArcHivist]]s 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.
* Hegelia undergoes [[cyber-conversion]] to record a first-hand experience of the process.
* [[Cyberman (Mondas)|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.  
* The Cybermen that have conquered [[Agora]] are [[CyberNomad]]s, a [[Cyber-subspecies]] that fought in the [[Vogan War]]. The [[Sixth Doctor]] recalls encountering them on [[Nerva Beacon]] as the [[Fourth Doctor]].
* Cyber-leaders can send out a disabling pulse to all Cyber-technology upon death.
* According to [[Graduand Jolarr]], the CyberNomad attack on [[Nerva Beacon]] occurred three-hundred [[year]]s after the end of the Vogan War.
* Hegelia proposed a hypothesis that a group of CyberNomads travelled to [[Telos]] and re-opened the [[Cyber-tomb]]s. They subsequently merged with the [[CyberTelosian]]s inside to become the [[CyberNeomorph]]s, which proliferated throughout the [[26th century]].
* The CyberNomads have been severely weakened by the Vogan War, in numerous ways:
** They use more organic material than any variants of Cybermen before them since the [[CyberMondan]]s, which has also led to the CyberNomads regaining the CyberMondans' weakness to strong levels of [[radiation]].
** The cyber-conversion technology used by the CyberNomads is significantly more primitive.
** The CyberNomad reinforcements that travel to Agora following the first force's destruction arrive in a [[Selachian]] battle cruiser, rather than a [[Cyber-ship]].


=== The Doctor ===
=== The Doctor ===
*The Doctor contemplates [[suicide]].
* The Doctor contemplates [[suicide]].
*The Doctor spends weeks in the [[TARDIS]] recovering from radiation poisoning sustained on board the Selacian warcraft.
* The Doctor spends weeks in [[The Doctor's TARDIS|his TARDIS]] recovering from the [[radiation poisoning]] he sustained onboard the Selachian battle cruiser.
*The Doctor is very good at resisting torture, and enjoys mocking his interrogator.


=== Individuals ===
=== Individuals ===
*The Doctor does not have much faith in his new companion Grant.
* Grant has severe [[Grimwade's Syndrome|robophobia]], as a result of witnessing the Cybermen [[murder]] [[Jean Markham|his mother]] when he was a [[child]].
* [[Grant Markham]] has severe [[Grimwade's Syndrome|robophobia]] brought upon by early childhood memories of the Cybermen.
* [[Arthur Lakesmith]] was the original rebel leader and was mutilated as a warning to other colonists following a failed rebellion in [[2176]].
* [[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 ==
== Notes ==
* This book is the second and final official appearance of companion [[Grant Markham]] in official media.
* This is the second and final appearance of companion [[Grant Markham]] in the ''[[Virgin Missing Adventures|Missing Adventures]]''. He would later appear in one more short story, ''[[Repercussions... (short story)|Repercussions...]]''.
* The cover by [[Alister Pearson]] contains the only official image of Grant.
* The cover, by [[Alister Pearson]], contained the only official image of Grant. Pearson based Grant's appearance on his own.
* Hegelia is from [[David Banks]]' [[Doctor Who: Cybermen|''Cybermen'']] book.
* The character Hegelia was from [[David Banks]]' book ''[[Doctor Who: Cybermen|Cybermen]]''.
* This story is set between ''[[Season 23 (Doctor Who 1963)|The Trial of a Time Lord]]'' and ''[[Time and the Rani (TV story)|Time and the Rani]]''.


== Continuity ==
== Continuity ==
* The Doctor exiled himself to Torrok after the events of [[TV]]: ''[[The Ultimate Foe]]'' and was forced to leave when the [[Time Lord]]s revealed him to the Watchers in [[PROSE]]: ''[[Time of Your Life]]''.
* The Doctor [[exile]]d himself to [[Torrok]] ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ultimate Foe (TV story)|The Ultimate Foe]]'') and was forced to leave when the [[Time Lord]]s revealed him to the Watchers. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Time of Your Life (novel)|Time of Your Life]]'')
* The Cybermen are those of the post-[[Cyber-Wars]] variant seen in [[TV]]: ''[[Revenge of the Cybermen (TV story)|Revenge of the Cybermen]]'', [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Sword of Orion (audio story)|Sword of Orion]]'' and the [[Cyberman (audio series)|''Cyberman'' audio series]].
* The Cybermen are [[CyberNomad]]s. ([[TV]]: ''[[Revenge of the Cybermen (TV story)|Revenge of the Cybermen]]'')
* The Doctor refers to the painful beginnings of his third [[regeneration]] in the TARDIS. ([[TV]]: ''[[Planet of the Spiders (TV story)|Planet of the Spiders]]'')
* The Doctor refers to the painful beginnings of his third [[regeneration]] in the TARDIS. ([[TV]]: ''[[Planet of the Spiders (TV story)|Planet of the Spiders]]'')
* When discussing the subjects of government cover-ups with Grant, the Doctor mentions the [[Great Intelligence]] ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]''), the [[Auton]]s ([[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons]]''), the [[Axos|Axons]] ([[TV]]: ''[[The Claws of Axos (TV story)|The Claws of Axos]]'') and the [[Zygon]]s ([[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Zygons (TV story)|Terror of the Zygons]]'').
* When discussing the subjects of government cover-ups with Grant, the Doctor mentions the [[Great Intelligence]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'') the [[Auton]]s, ([[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons]]'') the [[Axos|Axons]] ([[TV]]: ''[[The Claws of Axos (TV story)|The Claws of Axos]]'') and the [[Zygon]]s. ([[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Zygons (TV story)|Terror of the Zygons]]'')
* Earth is still rebuilding after the [[22nd century Dalek invasion|decade long Dalek occupation]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth (TV story)|The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]'')
* Earth is still rebuilding after the [[2150s Dalek invasion of Earth]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dalek Invasion of Earth (TV story)|The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]'')
*Grant had a recurring nightmare about being hunted by robots which was cured in [[PROSE]]: ''[[Time of Your Life]]''.
* Grant had a recurring [[nightmare]] about being hunted by robots, which was cured. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Time of Your Life (novel)|Time of Your Life]]'')
*The Cybermen in this novel periodically journey to the colony in a spacecraft similar to that seen in [[TV]]: ''[[Revenge of the Cybermen]]''.
* The [[Bronze Knight]]s' brutal crushing of Maddox's hands is an infamous reprise of Lytton's punishment in [[TV]]: ''[[Attack of the Cybermen]]''.
* Grant comes face-to-face with his father in mid-conversion, a scene that brings to mind Natasha meeting her father as a glass [[Dalek]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Revelation of the Daleks]]'' and [[Lytton]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Attack of the Cybermen]]''.
* The events of various Cybermen stories are mentioned: [[TV]]: ''[[Attack of the Cybermen]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[Iceberg (novel)|Iceberg]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Revenge of the Cybermen]]'' and [[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase]]''.
* Reference is made to [[the Valeyard]] seen in [[TV]]: ''[[The Trial of a Time Lord]]''.
* The TARDIS has an emergency exit. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Original Sin (novel)|Original Sin]]'')
* The TARDIS has an emergency exit. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Original Sin (novel)|Original Sin]]'')
* The Doctor recalls his visit to [[Thoros-Beta]] in [[2379]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Mindwarp (TV story)|Mindwarp]]'')


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{dwrefguide|who_ma23.htm|Killing Ground}}
{{dwrefguide|who_ma23.htm|Killing Ground}}
* {{whoniverse|MA23.php|Killing Ground}}
* {{whoniverse|ma23|Killing Ground}}
* [http://www.magnetopia.org/cloisterlibrary/kgro.htm The Cloister Library: '''Killing Ground''']
* [http://mysite.science.uottawa.ca/rsmith43/cloister/kgro.htm The Cloister Library: '''Killing Ground''']
{{prose stub}}
{{MA}}
{{MA}}
{{Cyberman stories}}
{{Cyberman stories}}
{{TitleSort}}
{{TitleSort}}
[[Category:MA novels]]
[[Category:MA novels]]
[[Category:Sixth Doctor novels]]
[[Category:Sixth Doctor novels]]
[[Category:1996 novels]]
[[Category:1996 novels]]
[[Category:Cyberman (Mondas) novels]]
[[Category:Novels set in Mutter's Spiral]]
[[Category:Stories set in Mutter's Spiral]]
[[Category:Stories set in 2191]]
[[Category:Stories set in 2191]]
[[Category:Stories set in 2100]]
[[Category:Stories set in 2100]]
[[Category:Novels set in the Sol System]]
[[Category:Cyberman novels]]

Latest revision as of 02:42, 3 July 2024

RealWorld.png

prose stub
You may be looking for the comic story of the same name.

Killing Ground was the twenty-third novel in the Virgin Missing Adventures series. Continuing on from the final events of author Steve Lyons' Time of Your Life, it showed what happened when the Sixth Doctor gave Grant Markham his "one trip" in the TARDIS — a journey back to Markham's home of Agora.

Unlike Time, however, Ground featured Markham as a prominent narrative element, and the book jacket formally dubbed him a "companion". Still, it proved to be his final outing in a licensed work, despite the fact that it ended in a way that promised more adventures for Markham and the Doctor.

Notably, it was one of only three novels published under Virgin Publishing's control of the Doctor Who licence to feature the Cybermen. The others were The Crystal Bucephalus and Iceberg.

Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]

"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[[edit] | [edit source]]

Ninety-one years in Grant Markham's past, the New Hope successfully launches from Earth. The Sixth Doctor and Grant observe the launch from inside the TARDIS, which is orbiting Mars. The Doctor comments that the New Hope will travel to the Centraxis system, and its crew will establish "the most remote of the prototype colonies", which Grant immediately identifies as Agora, his planet of origin. The Doctor comments that with humanity now beginning to expand into space, the numerous alien threats that Earth's governments have kept secret for centuries will be eager to exact revenge on humanity at a time in which humans will be less equipped to fight them. However, he confirms that the New Hope will arrive safely. Meanwhile, the majority of the New Hope's Administrative Council votes in favour of establishing a more primitive society on their new home, and eschewing the advanced technology of Earth.

In the midst of a rebellion on Agora, Ben Taggart flees from Population Control, having been driven out, along with the other surviving rebels, by the Cybermen. Falling over in the mud, he eventually gets up, believing the fighting to have passed him, only to be confronted by a Cyberman; the creature is shot dead, however, by Arthur Lakesmith, the leader of the rebellion against the Cybermen, who forces Taggart to accompany him back inside Population Control with a crude bomb, with the intention of blowing up the entire complex and potentially the Cyber-ship. However, inside the complex, the duo are attacked by more Cybermen, one of whom brutally maims Lakesmith, forcing Taggart to take the bomb and detonate it himself. Taggart flees, but is trapped by two Cybermen within an Overseers' rest area, preventing him from reaching the control centre. Fearfully contemplating that detonating the bomb, and sacrificing himself, here, may end up being for nothing, he places the bomb on the floor and surrenders.

More to be added

Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

Biologically modified species[[edit] | [edit source]]

Cybermen[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

Individuals[[edit] | [edit source]]

Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

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