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Lucifer Rising (novel)

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Revision as of 23:06, 24 September 2012 by Byfield (talk | contribs) (→‎Individuals)
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Lucifer Rising is the fourteenth novel in the Virgin New Adventures series. It was written by Jim Mortimore and Andy Lane. It was the first full novel to feature the Seventh Doctor, Ace and Bernice back together after Ace's reintroduction in the previous novel.

Publisher's summary

'If I'd wanted to spend the rest of my life hoofing it around grimy spaceships for no good reason I'd have stayed in Spacefleet.'

Ace is back. And she is not in a good mood.

Bernice has asked the Doctor to bring the TARDIS to the planet Lucifer, site of a scientific expedition. It's history to her: the exploration of alien artefacts on Lucifer came to an abrupt halt three centuries before she was born, and she's always wondered why.

Uncovering the answer involves the Doctor, Bernice and Ace in sabotage, murder, and the resurrection of eons-old alien powers.

Are there Angels on Lucifer? And what does it all have to do with Ace?

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

Archaeology

  • Bernice made her reputation excavating Ice Warrior citadels on Mars, which formed part of her first visit back to Earth (after she fled from Spacefleet). During the excavation, she made love to a man named Tim in the egg chamber.

Corporations

Daleks

The Doctor

  • E flat minor is the Doctor's favourite key.
  • The Doctor levitates while meditating in his cell.

Foods and beverages

Individuals

  • Ace dreams of being naked and stabbing someone.

Planets

Species

  • The Rills have a political system in which the uglier one is, the more power one attains.
  • The inhabitants of Delphon find the surgical removal of limbs to be highly sexually alluring.

Sectors of space

  • In the Axorc Sector it is considered to be the height of good manners to serve oneself up for dinner on special occasions.

Science

Notes

  • In an article in DWM 252 Andy Lane recalled:

"The original plot for Lucifer Rising had the Cybermen as the primary villains. A group of them had found religion and were travelling the universe in a space-going cathedral. Until a fairly late stage (in fact, after contracts had been signed) Legion in was, in fact an Alpha Centauran."[1]

  • A prelude to this novel was published in DWM 199.

Continuity

to be added

External links

Footnotes

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