The Coming of the Terraphiles (novel): Difference between revisions

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* Amy does not know who [[Tom Mix]] is.
* Amy does not know who [[Tom Mix]] is.
* The [[Roogalator]] has taken many forms, including the [[Arrow of Law]], the [[Cosmic Balance]], a [[sword]], a [[cup]], the [[Staff of Law]], and sometimes a living person.
* The [[Roogalator]] has taken many forms, including the [[Arrow of Law]], the [[Cosmic Balance]], a [[sword]], a [[cup]], the [[Staff of Law]], and sometimes a living person.
* [[Renark of the Rim]] discovered the [[multiverse]] of [[Law (Renark's multiverse)|Law]] and [[Chaos (Renark's multiverse)|Chaos]], leading to some [[theoretical astrophysics|theoretical astrophysicists]] to refer to it as [[Renark's multiverse]].
* [[Renark of the Rim]] discovered the [[multiverse]] of [[Law (The Coming of the Terraphiles)|Law]] and [[Chaos (The Coming of the Terraphiles)|Chaos]], leading to some [[theoretical astrophysics|theoretical astrophysicists]] to refer to it as [[Renark's multiverse]].
* Various planets have been [[terraforming|terraform]]ed for [[commercial world-building]]. These include literary worlds based off the works of [[Honoré de Balzac|Balzac]], [[Walt Disney|Disney]], "[[Jane Austen|Austin]]"[sic], [[George Meredith|Meredith]], [[Henry James|James]], [[Joe R. Lansdale|Lansdale]], [[China Miéville|Mieville]], [[Thomas Pynchon|Pynchon]], [[George Mann (in-universe)|Mann]], [[Upton Sinclair|Sinclair]], [[Pedro Calderón|Calderon]], [[Gary Gygax|Gygax]], and [[Alan Moore (in-universe)|Moore]].


=== Foods and Beverages ===
=== Foods and Beverages ===

Latest revision as of 02:21, 17 November 2024

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prose stub

The Coming of the Terraphiles was the the forty-third novel and first special release published by BBC Books in the BBC New Series Adventures. It was written by Michael Moorcock and featured the Eleventh Doctor.

In addition to being a Doctor Who story, the novel served as an entry in the continuity of the Michael Moorcock Multiverse, with Moorcock using the novel to explain the cosmology of his shared world.

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

There are dark tides running through the universe...

Miggea - a star on the very edge of reality. The cusp between this universe and the next. A point where space-time has worn thin, and is in danger of collapsing... And the venue for the grand finals of the competition to win the fabled Arrow of Law. The Doctor and Amy have joined the Terraphiles - a group obsessed with all aspects of Earth's history, and dedicated to re-enacting ancient sporting events. They are determined to win the Arrow. But just getting to Miggea proves tricky. Reality is collapsing, ships are disappearing, and Captain Cornelius and his pirates are looking for easy pickings. Even when they arrive, the Doctor and Amy's troubles won't be over. They have to find out who is so desperate to get the Arrow of Law that they will kill for it. And uncover the traitor on their own team. And win the contest fair and square. And, of course, they need to save the universe from total destruction.

Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

Foods and Beverages[[edit] | [edit source]]

Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The novel is subtitled Pirates of the Second Aether.
  • According to an interview with the author, Captain Jack Harkness was to appear in this novel, meeting the Eleventh Doctor and Amy Pond for the first time.[source needed]
  • The novel is the first one of its format, although it is quite similar to other Eleventh Doctor novels. The font is the same, as is the style for chapter numbering and the first few words of each chapter. The differences include the book's greater length, titles given to each chapter, a dust jacket and the main cast not appearing on the front cover.
  • A version of the novel's prologue appeared in the 2008 sci-fi pirate fiction anthology Fast Ships, Black Sails under the title "Ironface: A Vignette".
  • The novel was originally planned to have six interior illustrations by Mike Collins, but there ended up not being the time to have the proposed illustrations approved.[1] Contemporary reviewers who received the reviewer's copy referred to the book as being illustrated; Dan Berry's review in The DWM Review of DWM 427 claimed that the book was "lavishly illustrated".
The Nukeball art from GAME: Worlds Apart [+]Loading...["Worlds Apart (video game)"].


Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

Continuity with not-covered sources[[edit] | [edit source]]

Continuity with Michael Moorcock Multiverse[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Michael Moorcock Multiverse
  • Venice and Captain Cornelius first appeared in the 2008 short story "Ironface: A Vignette", which was reworked into this novel's prologue.
  • Horatio Quelch and the Chaos Engineers return from the Second Ether trilogy of novels.
  • Urquart Banning-Cannon shares his first name with a mariner from the novel The Ice Schooner.
  • Miggea is said to be named after an old Earth warrior-goddess. This is a reference to Lady Miggea, a corrupt goddess of the Law who featured in the trilogy of Elric novels The Dreamthief's Daughter, The Skrayling Tree, and The White Wolf's Son.
  • The Ghost Worlds appear, originating from Moorcock's The Eternal Champion and notably appearing in The Sundered Worlds.
  • The Doctor references Renark of the Rim, the protagonist of the novel The Sundered Worlds.
  • Ketchup Cove appears, a location introduced in Blood: A Southern Fantasy.
  • When the Doctor becomes the node of the multiverse, he sees the moonbeam roads, as introduced in Blood: A Southern Fantasy.
  • The scientist Morphail is mentioned, a character from the novel The Hollow Lands.
  • The Doctor says that, unlike most individuals in the multiverse, he is a unique being. However, he is of a heroic archetype which has echoes and shadows throughout the multiverse but has no beginning or end. This description resembles the "Eternal Champion" idea which is a key feature of the Michael Moorcock Multiverse.

Other[[edit] | [edit source]]

Releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The hardback edition was released on 14 October 2010 (ISBN 978-1-84607-983-2)
  • A paperback version was released on 4 August 2011 with a different cover. (ISBN 978-1-84990-140-6)
  • This story was also released as an ebook available from the Amazon Kindle store.

Editions published outside Britain[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Published in Russia by AST in 2015 as a hardback edition, it was one of eight books published in the 2010's.
  • Published in Germany by Bastei Lübbe in 2018 as a paperback edition, it was one of three books published by them in the 2010's.

Audiobook[[edit] | [edit source]]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  1. Michael Moorcock (23 October 2010). Illustrations?. Moorcock's Miscellany Forum. Archived from the original on 14 November 2024. Retrieved on 14 November 2024. “Simply that the schedule didn't allow time for them to be submitted, vetted by 'Cardiff', and drawn from his selected roughs by the artist. There's talk of putting them in the paperback.”

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