Placebo Effect (novel): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Line 110: Line 110:
* [[Micawber]]
* [[Micawber]]
* [[Zzano'pt'll]]
* [[Zzano'pt'll]]
* [[Teknix]]
* [[Tarrant (Placebo Effect)|Tarrant]]
* [[Tarrant (Placebo Effect)|Tarrant]]
* [[Patriarch One]]
* [[Patriarch One]]

Revision as of 18:25, 19 May 2023

RealWorld.png

prose stub

Placebo Effect was the thirteenth novel in the BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures series. It was written by Gary Russell, released 6 July 1998 and featured the Eighth Doctor and Sam Jones.

It also featured Stacy Townsend and Ssard, a human and Ice Warrior respectively, who had travelled with the Doctor in the Radio Times comic stories. This novel was the second BBC Books novel to feature a crossing of two different ranges, following the previous month's Mission: Impractical.

Publisher's summary

It is 3999. An artificial planetoid, Micawber's World, is hosting the Intergalactic Olympic Games, and athletes from all the worlds in the Galactic Federation are coming to take part. But when the Doctor and Sam arrive, murders soon begin...

The Doctor finds himself drafted in to examine some bizarre new drugs that are said to enhance the natural potential of the competing athletes. But what is their real purpose? Why are members of the Security Forces disappearing randomly? And just why is Chase Carrington, manufacturer of the drug, so protective of his company's secrets?

Watching and waiting, at the very heart of Micawber's World, is a race of parasites the Doctor has fought before. The Wirrn have come to the Milky Way from Andromeda, determined to spread their seed throughout a whole new galaxy, and it seems to Sam that the Doctor's hands are too full to pay their threat full attention...

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

The Doctor

Individuals

Organisations

Planets

Religion

Species

Titles and offices

Notes

  • This is the first "crossover" novel of the EDAs, crossing characters from the Radio Times comic strip with novel characters and events.
  • In his introduction Gary Russell notes that the Wirrrn were spelt with three Rs in the novelisation of The Ark in Space, and continues the tradition throughout this novel.
  • There were at least two alternate covers for this novel:

Continuity

External links