The Blogs of Doom: Difference between revisions
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| ''[[The Investigator (short story)|The Investigator]]'' | | ''[[The Investigator (short story)|The Investigator]]'' | ||
| [[Investigator (The Mutants)|The Investigator]] from ''[[The Mutants (TV story)|The Mutants]]'' | | [[Investigator (The Mutants)|The Investigator]] from ''[[The Mutants (TV story)|The Mutants]]'' | ||
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| 36 | |||
| [[DWM 556]] | |||
| ''[[Harold Chorley (short story)|Harold Chorley]]'' | |||
| [[Harold Chorley]] from ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'' | |||
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| 37 | |||
| [[DWM 557]] | |||
|colspan=2|TBA | |||
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[[Category:Prose fiction overviews]] | [[Category:Prose fiction overviews]] | ||
[[Category:Doctor Who Magazine]] | [[Category:Doctor Who Magazine]] |
Revision as of 22:30, 19 October 2020
The Blogs of Doom was the title for a series of prose vignettes by Jonathan Morris which appeared in the Doctor Who Magazine beginning in 2017. Similar to the earlier Brief Encounter series, it often used its short format to give the spotlight to a variety of comparatively obscure characters.
Overview
The premise of each entry of The Blogs of Doom was described as "Sneaky peeks into the secret diaries of characters in the Doctor's orbit…". This meant that all short stories, which often recorded events in the life of the character immediately leading up to their appearance in a Doctor Who television story, were told in first person perspective, and often in an epistolary style — a stylistic feature shared by some Brief Encounters.
The entries, all of which featured original illustrations by Ben Morris, were credited as being "as told to" Jonathan Morris. They were unafraid to occasionally dip over into comedy, often turning the viewer's understanding of certain elements of the original TV stories on its head. A sense of continuity in a wider, connected Doctor Who universe was achieved by having characters from shared time periods comment on the events of other TV stories set in the same time and place; for example, Patsy from The Talons of Weng-Chiang mentions hearing tell of the Whisper Men and the Crimson Horror in The Ghoul.