Slow Decay (novel): Difference between revisions

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Tag: 2017 source edit
Tag: 2017 source edit
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== Continuity ==
== Continuity ==
* The [[Tenth Doctor]] investigated a completely different [[Adipose Industries|weight loss programme]] in [[TV]]: ''[[Partners in Crime (TV story)|Partners in Crime]]''.
* Gwen secretly takes an [[emotional amplifier]] from [[the Hub]] to use in her private life. Many of the team previously borrowed items. ([[TV]]: ''[[Everything Changes (TV story)|Everything Changes]]'')
* Gwen secretly takes an [[emotional amplifier]] from [[the Hub]] to use in her private life. Many of the team previously borrowed items. ([[TV]]: ''[[Everything Changes (TV story)|Everything Changes]]'')
* Toshiko finds Ianto acting strangely around a chamber in the [[Torchwood Archive]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Cyberwoman (TV story)|Cyberwoman]]'')
* Toshiko finds Ianto acting strangely around a chamber in the [[Torchwood Archive]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Cyberwoman (TV story)|Cyberwoman]]'')

Revision as of 04:44, 26 September 2021

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prose stub

Slow Decay was the third release in the BBC Torchwood Novels series.

Publisher's summary

When Torchwood track an energy surge to a Cardiff nightclub, the team finds the police are already at the scene. Five teenagers have died in a fight, and lying among the bodies is an extraterrestrial device. Next morning, they discover the corpse of a Weevil, its face and neck eaten away, seemingly by human teeth. And on the streets of Cardiff, an ordinary woman with an extraordinary hunger is attacking people and eating her victims.

The job of a lifetime it might be, but working for Torchwood is putting big strains on Gwen's relationship with Rhys. While she decides to spice up their love life with the help of alien technology, Rhys decides it's time to sort himself out — better music, healthier food, lose some weight. Luckily, a friend has mentioned Doctor Scotus's weight-loss clinic...

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

Notes

  • The plotline of medical malpractice and treatment using an alien parastite is similar to the Torchwood television story Reset.
  • In the novel, Owen Harper quickly comes up with Tapanuli Fever to falsely describe the condition of Marianne Till. Tapanuli Fever is fictional illness from the Sherlock Holmes story The Adventure of the Dying Detective.

Audio release

  • The story was released as an audiobook on 3x CD read by Burn Gorman.
  • The audiobook is also available as a download from the AudioGo website.

Continuity

Gallery

External links