Continuity Errors (short story): Difference between revisions
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{{real world}} | {{real world}} | ||
{{Infobox Story | {{Infobox Story | ||
|series= [[Virgin Decalogs]] | |series = [[Virgin Decalogs]] | ||
|doctor = Seventh Doctor | |doctor = Seventh Doctor | ||
|companions=[[Bernice Summerfield]] | |companions = [[Bernice Summerfield]] | ||
|setting = [[New Alexandria]] | |setting = [[New Alexandria]] | ||
|writer=[[Steven Moffat]] | |writer = [[Steven Moffat]] | ||
|anthology = ''[[Decalog 3: Consequences]]'' | |anthology = ''[[Decalog 3: Consequences]]'' | ||
|prev=Fegovy (short story) | |prev = Fegovy (short story) | ||
|next = Timevault (short story) | |next = Timevault (short story) | ||
}}{{prose stub}} | }}{{prose stub}} |
Revision as of 09:57, 18 March 2023
Continuity Errors was the eighth story in the anthology Decalog 3: Consequences. It was written by Steven Moffat (his first professional Doctor Who work). It featured the Seventh Doctor and Bernice Summerfield.
Summary
to be added
Characters
References
- Andrea Talwinning was born in 2625.
Notes
- This was Steven Moffat's first professionally published Doctor Who-related storyline. He would go on to pen the 1999 spoof The Curse of Fatal Death before becoming a multi-Hugo Award-winning scriptwriter for the revived series from 2005 to 2008, and then the show's executive producer commencing in 2009.
- Moffat reused the idea of the Doctor travelling back in time to alter a person's perception of him in the television story A Christmas Carol.
- The idea of a planet-sized library was later reused in the television story Silence in the Library, while the description of the Doctor as a Complex Space-Time Event was echoed by his self-identification as a complicated space-time event in Flesh and Stone. Professor Candy himself would ultimately get a televised cameo in the final scene of Let's Kill Hitler.
- Moffat originally considered calling this story both History MD and The Curse Of Fatal Death, the latter of which he later used.[1]
Continuity
- Professor Candy is mentioned in PROSE: Oh No It Isn't!, and appears in TV: Let's Kill Hitler.
- The Library was inspired by the events of PROSE: Fegovy.