Goth Opera (novel): Difference between revisions

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Tag: 2017 source edit
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Tag: 2017 source edit
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|featuring2  = Flavia
|featuring2  = Flavia
|featuring3  = Sabalom Glitz
|featuring3  = Sabalom Glitz
|featuring4  = Dibber
|enemy        = [[Ruath]], [[Yarven]]
|enemy        = [[Ruath]], [[Yarven]]
|setting      = {{il|[[Manchester (city)|Manchester]] and [[Tasmania]], [[1993]]|[[Gallifrey]]}}
|setting      = {{il|[[Manchester (city)|Manchester]] and [[Tasmania]], [[1993]]|[[Gallifrey]]}}

Revision as of 06:56, 16 August 2022

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prose stub

Goth Opera was the first novel in the Virgin Missing Adventures series. Written by Paul Cornell, it featured the Fifth Doctor, Tegan Jovanka and Nyssa. It built on the narrative in the novel Blood Harvest, which was deliberately crafted to build interest in this novel.

Publisher's summary

"The time of humanity on this world has come to an end. The long night is starting. The age of the undead is upon us."

Manchester, 1993. The vampires of Great Britain have received a message: the long-awaited arrival of their evil messiah is imminent. It's time for a recruitment drive.

On holiday in Tasmania with Tegan and the Fifth Doctor, Nyssa is attacked by a demonic child. She escapes unharmed — except for two small wounds in her neck.

Why are the descendants of the Great Vampire so desperate to obtain the blood of a Time Lord? And what is their connection to a forbidden ancient Gallifreyan cult?

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

The Doctor

Individuals

Gallifrey

Notes

The original, unused cover.
  • In the original cover artwork for the novel, there was much more blood on Nyssa's clothes. This was considered too graphic a cover image by W H Smith, the UK's largest book retailer, so the image was altered to be less graphic before publication.[1]
  • The plot for the novel was originally developed from an unproduced comic strip for Doctor Who Magazine, which would have featured the Fourth Doctor in a fight against Dracula. Cornell revised the story to use the Fifth Doctor for this novel. (REF: I, Who)
  • Paul Cornell once called the experiencing of writing this novel "most unpleasant", but did not elaborate.[2]
  • The back cover indicates this story takes place between the television stories Snakedance and Mawdryn Undead.

Continuity

External links

Footnotes