The Stealers of Dreams (novel)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 04:49, 18 February 2015 by CzechBot (talk | contribs) (Robot: Cosmetic changes)
RealWorld.png

The Stealers of Dreams was the sixth and final Ninth Doctor novel released. This was the final major piece of prose to feature the line up of the Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler and Jack Harkness.

Publisher's summary

In the far future, the Doctor, Rose and Captain Jack find a world on which fiction has been outlawed. A world where it’s a crime to tell stories, a crime to lie, a crime to hope, and a crime to dream.

But now somebody is challenging the status quo. A pirate TV station urges people to fight back. And the Doctor wants to help -- until he sees how easily dreams can turn into nightmares.

With one of his companions stalked by shadows and the other committed to an asylum, the Doctor is forced to admit that fiction can be dangerous after all. Though perhaps it is not as deadly as the truth...

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

Foods and beverages

  • The chips on the colony are made from a local vegetable which is blue. They are soft, oily and peppery.

Individuals

Locations

  • Jack once ran out of fuel in the Ataline system with nothing but a traffic cone he'd picked up on a night out.

Objects

  • The Doctor thinks that using his psychic paper to pretend to pay his hotel bill is justified because he's probably about to save the hotelier's world.

Story notes

  • There is a reference to the events of Boom Town, placing it after that story. However, at the end of Boom Town, the Doctor stated they were going to Raxacoricofallapatorius. Then in Bad Wolf, he said they went from there to Japan, before being caught in the transmat.
  • This is the last Ninth Doctor novel.
  • This story was also released as an ebook available from the Amazon Kindle store.
the Audiobook cover.

Continuity

Audio release

  • The story was released as an audiobook read by Camille Coduri.
  • The audiobook is only available as a download from the AudioGo website.

External links