Home Truths (audio story): Difference between revisions

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==References==
==References==
*The Old Woman mentions that Sara had been to [[Hollywood]] and was considered for a role in a movie.  ([[DW]]: "[[The Daleks' Master Plan#The Feast of Steven (7)|The Feast of Steven]]"  However, by Robert's time, Hollywood was unknown.  
*The Old Woman mentions that Sara had been to [[Hollywood]] and was considered for a role in a movie.  ([[DW]]: "[[The Daleks' Master Plan#The Feast of Steven (7)|The Feast of Steven]]") However, by Robert's time, Hollywood was unknown.  
*Robert says that war is unknown in his era, no conflict having been fought for generations.  He says that although he has sworn an oath to defend his society in time of war, he would need a good reason to enthusiastically participate in one.  A possible inference that can be drawn from his conversation with the Old Woman is that there has been no war since Sara Kingdom's day.
*Robert says that war is unknown in his era, no conflict having been fought for generations.  He says that although he has sworn an oath to defend his society in time of war, he would need a good reason to enthusiastically participate in one.  A possible inference that can be drawn from his conversation with the Old Woman is that there has been no war since Sara Kingdom's day.



Revision as of 22:12, 30 November 2010

Home Truths was a 2008 audio play released by Big Finish Productions. It featured Jean Marsh relating a story featuring Sara Kingdom, Steven Taylor and the Doctor, but did so from a more indirect angle than was typical for the Companion Chronicle range. Unusually, the "present day" of the narrative was at least 1000 years after Sara's death.

It began a trilogy later continued in the prequel, The Drowned World, and the sequel, The Guardian of the Solar System.

Publisher's summary

There’s a house across the waters at Ely where an old woman tells a strange story.

About a kind of night constable called Sara Kingdom. And her friends, the Doctor and Steven. About a journey they made to a young couple’s home, and the nightmarish things that were found there. About the follies of youth and selfishness. And the terrible things even the most well-meaning of us can inflict on each other.

Hear the old woman's story. Then decide her fate.

Cast

References

  • The Old Woman mentions that Sara had been to Hollywood and was considered for a role in a movie. (DW: "The Feast of Steven") However, by Robert's time, Hollywood was unknown.
  • Robert says that war is unknown in his era, no conflict having been fought for generations. He says that although he has sworn an oath to defend his society in time of war, he would need a good reason to enthusiastically participate in one. A possible inference that can be drawn from his conversation with the Old Woman is that there has been no war since Sara Kingdom's day.

Notes

  • Dialogue within the story calls into question how trustworthy the narrator actually is. Thus, it is difficult to know just how accurately the Doctor, Sara and Steven are portrayed.
  • This story has some commonality with DWM: "Funhouse", in that the key antagonist is an intelligent house.
  • This is an unusual Companion Chronicle in that the returning actor from Doctor Who portrays the nominal villain of the piece.

Continuity

Timeline

External links