Fungus (short story): Difference between revisions
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* The Doctor makes significant use of a [[dog whistle]] in the story. Though unusual for the [[Fifth Doctor]], it was a tool that he sometimes used in his [[Fourth Doctor|previous incarnation]] to call [[K9]]. | * The Doctor makes significant use of a [[dog whistle]] in the story. Though unusual for the [[Fifth Doctor]], it was a tool that he sometimes used in his [[Fourth Doctor|previous incarnation]] to call [[K9]]. | ||
* The professor is constantly irritated by the enigmatic way in which the Doctor pieces together the puzzle. The Doctor's habit of dropping clues without fully explaining them fully is fairly consistent amongst all incarnations, and echoes a dynamic present in several Doctor/[[companion]] relationships, like [[First Doctor]]/[[Ian Chesterton|Ian]], [[Third Doctor]]/[[the Brig|Brigadier]], and even [[Eleventh Doctor]]/[[Jenny Flint|Jenny]]/[[Vastra]]. | * The professor is constantly irritated by the enigmatic way in which the Doctor pieces together the puzzle. The Doctor's habit of dropping clues without fully explaining them fully is fairly consistent amongst all incarnations, and echoes a dynamic present in several Doctor/[[companion]] relationships, like [[First Doctor]]/[[Ian Chesterton|Ian]], [[Third Doctor]]/[[the Brig|Brigadier]], and even [[Eleventh Doctor]]/[[Jenny Flint|Jenny]]/[[Vastra]]. | ||
[[Category:Prose stub switch]] | |||
{{TitleSort}} | {{TitleSort}} | ||
[[Category:Fifth Doctor short stories]] | [[Category:Fifth Doctor short stories]] | ||
[[Category:1983 short stories]] | [[Category:1983 short stories]] | ||
[[Category:DWAN short stories]] | [[Category:DWAN short stories]] |
Revision as of 12:56, 9 January 2015
Fungus was a short story from the 1984 Doctor Who annual. It unusually featured a companion-less Fifth Doctor meeting up with a previously-unseen "old friend" called Professor Lloyd and having an adventure that was almost exclusively laboratory-bound.
Summary
Somewhere in the United Kingdom, a young woman called Edith Stevens is attacked by her cat, Boris. Elsewhere in the country, Professor Lloyd informs the Fifth Doctor of the epidemic of similar cat attacks that are sweeping the nation.
The Doctor immediately begins investigating his old friend's problem. He uses his heightened olfactory senses to determine that something about the milk in his tea is "off". Lloyd's human senses aren't keen enough to detect anything, so the Doctor is forced to prove it through careful examination of the milk. He discovers a fungus that he enigmatically says that he's seen before. When asked why the milk isn't affecting other animals, like humans, the Doctor surmises that cats are simply particularly susceptible.
The time traveller then begins to question Lloyd about the current origin of Britain's milk. The Time Lord is surprised to discover that the tanks in which the milk is being stored comes from Houston, Texas. Somehow, the fungus has spread from outer space to the Houston-made milk vats to the cats of Britain.
The Doctor uses his previous knowledge of the fungus to develop a quick solution: a high-pitched sound, as delivered from a dog whistle, will successfully knock out the virus. He leaves it in Lloyd's hands to get the government of Britain to co-ordinate short bursts of sound from radio stations around the country.
Characters
References
to be added
Notes
- The story features a trope that was extraordinarily common in World Distributors' annuals: that of the Doctor meeting an "old friend" of whom the readers were not previously aware. The trope allowed the writer to get away with depicting a close relationship with the Doctor without having to explain why. This shorthand was extremely valuable to World Distributors authors, given the brevity of the stories.
Continuity
- The Doctor makes significant use of a dog whistle in the story. Though unusual for the Fifth Doctor, it was a tool that he sometimes used in his previous incarnation to call K9.
- The professor is constantly irritated by the enigmatic way in which the Doctor pieces together the puzzle. The Doctor's habit of dropping clues without fully explaining them fully is fairly consistent amongst all incarnations, and echoes a dynamic present in several Doctor/companion relationships, like First Doctor/Ian, Third Doctor/Brigadier, and even Eleventh Doctor/Jenny/Vastra.