The Stone Rose (novel): Difference between revisions

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* The TARDIS wardrobe is alphabetised. (R for Rome, A for Ancient, etc.)
* The TARDIS wardrobe is alphabetised. (R for Rome, A for Ancient, etc.)
* The Doctor references the author Jonathan Swift when he reminds Vanessa that her name was originated by the aforementioned author who was born long after the time of the Romans.
* The Doctor references the author Jonathan Swift when he reminds Vanessa that her name was originated by the aforementioned author who was born long after the time of the Romans.
* The Doctor mentions [[The Moomins]], [[Chorlton and the Wheelies]] and [[SpongeBob SquarePants]] when talking about how stories are based on disappearing time trails.
* The Doctor mentions [[wikipedia:The Moomins|The Moomins]], [[wikipedia:Chorlton and the Wheelies|Chorlton and the Wheelies]] and [[wikipedia:Spongebob SquarePants|Spongebob SquarePants]] when talking about how stories are based on disappearing time trails.


== Notes ==
== Notes ==

Revision as of 13:57, 3 June 2015

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The Stone Rose was the seventh book of the BBC New Series Adventures range.

The book was written by Jacqueline Rayner and was the first book of the series to feature the Tenth Doctor. Rose Tyler continued to be featured as the companion in the series, as she had in the previous six books.

The book was released only two days before David Tennant's first series on Doctor Who, which started its run on 15 April.

Publisher's summary

2006 BBC Books Edition

Mickey is startled to find a statue of Rose in a museum - a statue that is 2,000 years old. The Doctor realises that this means the TARDIS will shortly take them to ancient Rome, but when it does, he and Rose soon have more on their minds than a sculpture.

While the Doctor searches for a missing boy, Rose befriends a girl who claims to know the future - a girl whose predictions are surprisingly accurate. But then the Doctor stumbles on the hideous truth behind the statue of Rose - and Rose herself learns that you have to be very careful what you wish for...

2015 BBC Books Edition

A 2,000 year old statue of Rose Tyler is a mystery that the Doctor and Rose can only solve by travelling back to the time when it was made. But when they do, they find the mystery is deeper and more complicated than they ever imagined.

While the Doctor searches for a missing boy, Rose befriends a girl who it seems can accurately predict the future. But when the Doctor stumbles on the terrible truth behind the statue, Rose herself learns that you have to be very careful what you wish for.

An adventure set in Roman times, featuring the Tenth Doctor as played by David Tennant and his companion Rose Tyler.

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

  • The Doctor keeps a set of Winnie the Pooh bed linens in the TARDIS.
  • The TARDIS wardrobe is alphabetised. (R for Rome, A for Ancient, etc.)
  • The Doctor references the author Jonathan Swift when he reminds Vanessa that her name was originated by the aforementioned author who was born long after the time of the Romans.
  • The Doctor mentions The Moomins, Chorlton and the Wheelies and Spongebob SquarePants when talking about how stories are based on disappearing time trails.

Notes

  • After being unfrozen, the Doctor kisses Rose Tyler for the joy of being alive.
  • The very complicated formula to turn people back from stone which had never been thought up by anybody is an example of a bootstrap paradox. The Doctor warns Rose not think about that too hard.
  • This is the first Tenth Doctor novel.
  • Later reprints of this book removed the image of Billie Piper from the cover, presumably due to use-of-likeness issues after she had left the programme. The 2015 reprint in The History Collection features an introduction from Rayner.
  • This story was also released as an ebook available from the Amazon Kindle store.

Continuity

  • The Doctor asks Rose if she ever nearly married someone she shouldn't have. This could be a reference to Rose's marriage to Tillun in PROSE: Only Human, a reference to Rose's engagement to former boyfriend Jimmy Stone (although this occurred before Rose first met the Doctor), and/or a reference to the Doctor's own weddings that he was rubbish at. (TV: Blink)

Audio release

  • The story was released as an audiobook on 2x CD read by David Tennant.

Gallery

External links


prose stub