The Room With No Doors (novel)

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The Room With No Doors (novel) is the fifty-ninth Virgin New Adventures novel, it is the second-last novel in the New Adventures series to feature the Seventh Doctor, and it is the last novel to feature just the Seventh Doctor and Chris Cwej pairing.

Publisher's summary

‘Dear Doctor,’ wrote Chris, ‘I give up.’

Swordplay, samurai, demons, magic, aliens, adventure, excitement... Who needs them?

The Doctor and Chris travel to 16th-century Japan, a country gripped by civil war as feudal lords vie for control. Anything could tip the balance of power. So when a god falls out of the sky, everyone wants it.

As villagers are healed and crops grow far too fast, the Doctor and Chris try to find the secret of the miracles -- before the two rival armies can start a war over who owns the god. Chris soon finds himself alone -- except for an alien slaver, a time-travelling Victorian inventor, a gang of demons, an old friend with suspicious motives, a village full of innocent bystanders, and several thousand samurai.

Without the Doctor, someone has to take up the challenge of adventure and stop the god from falling into the wrong hands. Someone has to be a hero -- but Chris isn’t sure he wants to be a hero any more.

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

Biology

The Doctor

  • The Doctor gets shot with an arrow whilst carrying a small girl.
  • The Doctor knows that his regeneration grows near.
  • The Doctor mediates in a lotus position instead of sleeping, but when he does sleep he screams and shouts.

Individuals

  • The death of Liz Shaw weighs heavy on Chris.
  • Penelope Gate is twenty-seven years old, Victorian, red haired.
  • Joel Mintz (Joel Andrew Mintz) hasn't seen the Doctor and Chris in thirteen years, but he has met the Eighth Doctor.


History

Time travel

  • Penelope Gate's time machine has a Tzun battery powering it.

Notes

  • In a sequence cut from this novel Wolsey was to have succumbed to the dreams plaguing Chris, meeting three other cats in the TARDIS; black, white and red representing the three gods of Gallifrey. They are joined by the rose-woman later to appear in Lungbarrow.[1]

Continuity

Timeline

External links

Footnotes

  1. DWM: DWM 252 (Licence to Kill p.28)
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