The Clockwise Man (novel): Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Stories set in 1924]]
[[Category:Stories set in 1924]]
[[Category:Bad Wolf arc|Clockwise Man, The]]
[[Category:Bad Wolf arc|Clockwise Man, The]]
[[Category:Stories set in London]]

Revision as of 13:37, 21 January 2010


Publisher's Summary

In 1920s London, the Doctor and Rose find themselves caught up in the hunt for a mysterious murderer. But not everything is what it seems. Secrets lie behind locked doors and inhuman killers roam the streets.

Who is the Painted Lady and why is she so interested in the Doctor? How can a cat return from the dead? Can anyone be trusted to tell -- or even to know -- the truth?

With the faceless killers closing in, the Doctor and Rose must solve the mystery of the Clockwise Man before London itself is destroyed...

Characters

References

Notes

As Book 1 of the BBC New Series Adventures line, this book ushered in a new publication format for BBC Books, which exclusively released this and all future New Series Adventures featuring the Ninth and Tenth Doctors, as well as BBC Torchwood novels in hardcover format (although the Quick Reads novellas remained as paperback releases and some limited-edition promotional paperback issues of Ninth and Tenth Doctor books would occur outside the UK). The Clockwise Man is the first Doctor Who novel to be released in hardcover since Target Books discontinued publishing hardcover editions of its novelisations in the 1980s, and it is the first original Doctor Who novel ever issued in the format.

Continuity

  • There is a mention of Rose 'dressing up' while the Doctor only has a 'new shirt'
  • Rose has a conversation with one of the servants in the Imperial Club, and the girl makes her think of Gwyneth, who appeared in DW: The Unquiet Dead.
  • In the club, the Doctor looks at a painting of the French Revolution and says "That's not right". In the first episode of Doctor Who, An Unearthly Child, the Doctor's granddaughter, Susan Foreman, reads a book about the French Revolution and says the same words.
  • The Doctor mentions to Rose at the end of the Season 2 episode DW: Tooth and Claw that Queen Victoria suffered from a condition called Haemaphilia. This was also mentioned when The Doctor and Rose visit the British Empire Exhibition.

Timeline

External Links

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