Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark (novel): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 06:10, 21 July 2015
Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark is the seventh novel in the Virgin New Adventures series and the final book in the Cat's Cradle arc. It was written by Andrew Hunt and features the Seventh Doctor and Ace.
Publisher's summary
"Spare no sympathy for those creatures. They were witches, they deserved to die."
A coach crashes on the M40. All the passengers are killed. The bodies carry no identification; they are wearing similar new clothes. And each has a suitcase full of banknotes.
A country vet delivers a foal. The mare has a deep wound in her forehead. In the straw, the vet finds a tapered horn.
In the darkening and doomed world known to its inhabitants as Tír na n-Óg, the besieged humans defend the walls of their citadel Dinorben against mythical beasts and demons.
The TARDIS's link with the Eye of Harmony is becoming ever more tenuous and is in urgent need of repair. But the time machine takes the Doctor and Ace to a village in rural Wales, and a gateway to another world.
Chapter Titles
- Prologue
- Arrivals
- Strange Beasts
- Missing Persons
- Arawn's Wheel
- An Unexpected Party
- A Journey in the Dark
- Unwelcome Visitors
- Three Is Company
- Rissole Time
- Many Meetings
- Corn Circles
- Fire and Water
- The Land of Shadow
- There ...
- Dagda's Wheel
- Altered Flesh
- ... And Back Again
Plot
to be added
Characters
- The Seventh Doctor
- Ace
- Lynx
- Bat
- Bathsheba
- Chulainn
- Daffyr
- David
- Dryfid
- Emrys Hughes
- Goibhnie
- Inspector Graham Stevens
- Herne
- Hugh
- Constable Hughes
- Jack
- Janet
- Nuada
- Old Davy
- Rhys
- Selwyn Hughes
- Stuart Taylor
References
Books
- The Book of Rassilon starts with "In the beginning...".
Foods and beverages
- The Doctor and Ace eat potato and leek soup.
- The Doctor fries up bacon for everyone.
- Ace doesn't like Spam.
- The Doctor claims that there's a fish and chip shop in Rhyl "whose Spam sandwiches can't be equalled this side of the Crab Nebula."
Individuals
- Ace is not very religious.
- Lynx, the silver cat which has been popping up, is generated by the TARDIS, and normally resides in a cat's cradle of mathematics in the time rotor when not needed.
- Stuart Taylor is the local vet.
Organisations
- Scotland Yard has a one-man Paranormal Investigations Team consisting of Inspector Stevens.
Planets
- Earth is widely recognised as one of the causal nexus points of the galaxy.
Species
- A speck of demonic protoplasm infects the TARDIS.
Notes
- This is the final novel in the Cat's Cradle Trilogy.
Continuity
- Clones of the Doctor and Ace appear in PROSE: Return of the Living Dad.
- In PROSE: Deceit the effects of the protoplasm on the Doctor are revealed.
- Ace refers to events/experiences of TV: Dragonfire, Remembrance of the Daleks, and Survival.
- The Doctor once again encounters a biomechanoid dragon, having met the Dragon of Iceworld. (TV: Dragonfire)
- The Doctor comments that spiders can be nasty things. (TV: Planet of the Spiders)
- Gallifrey as a source of "morphologically unstable living organic matter" may refer to validium. (TV: Silver Nemesis)
- The mention of King Arthur is an indirect reference to TV: Battlefield.
- The Doctor refers to the time he took his past companion Mel to a Welsh holiday camp in the 1950s. (TV: Delta and the Bannermen)
- Ace mentions that she used to be waitress and remembers the time she met the Cheetah People. (TV: Survival) She also remembers the time she went to 1963. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)
- When the demons are fought off using faith, Ace thinks of the Haemovores, aliens which were similarly fought off. (TV: The Curse of Fenric)
External links
- Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Discontinuity Guide to: Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark at The Whoniverse
- The Cloister Library: Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark
- Bewildering Reference Guide entry to Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark, with notes by the author