The Joy Device (novel): Difference between revisions
(Adding categories) |
m (Robot: Cosmetic changes) Tag: apiedit |
||
Line 66: | Line 66: | ||
{{BNA}} | {{BNA}} | ||
{{TitleSort}} | {{TitleSort}} | ||
[[Category:Bernice Summerfield stories]] | [[Category:Bernice Summerfield stories]] | ||
[[Category:1999 novels]] | [[Category:1999 novels]] |
Revision as of 04:26, 18 February 2015
The Joy Device was the twenty-second Virgin Bernice Summerfield New Adventures novel. It was written by Justin Richards. Published in October 1999, this is the penultimate Virgin-published Bernice Summerfield novel.
Publisher's summary
"Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes... it's worse than Samuel Beckett."
Benny has had enough. Enough of the angst and the heartache. Enough of Jason and the others. She needs a holiday, and so she's heading to the Eastern Rim, a part of the galaxy where there is still a frontier, and adventure to be had. She's packed her trowel. She's off.
Her friends are concerned. Drug barons, war lords, criminal cartels and outlaws have fled to the Rim from authority and order. There's a distinct risk of getting into trouble, not to mention life-threatening peril. It's not so much that Benny might come to harm; she might find she likes it out there.
But Benny finds the Eastern Rim almost suspiciously ordinary: no violence, no action, no excitement. So when she is asked by a shady curio dealer to help him find Dorpfeld's Prism, it seems just another cursed relic to recover before retiring to the bar. In a place this dull, nothing dangerous can possibly happen. Can it?
Plot
to be added
Characters
- Bernice Summerfield
- Dent Harper
- Jason Kane
- Clarence
- Irving Braxiatel
- Chris Cwej
- Rula Winther
- Nikole Medak
References
Books
- Dent Harper has written many best sellers including Adventures on the Rim.
Buildings
- The building work for the Braxiatel Collection continues on KS-159.
Individuals
- Bernice Summerfield is now aged "30 something and a half".
- Clarence can wrap his wings behind him, so it appears as though he's wearing a bulky backpack. He has a moustache for much of the novel, which looks fake, but isn't.
Objects
- Dorpfeld's Prism affects the wearer giving them an overly pleasant sense of perspective and reality.
Notes
to be added
Continuity
to be added
External links
- The Joy Device at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Discontinuity Guide to: The Joy Device at The Whoniverse