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Lawrence Miles wrote several Doctor Who and Bernice Summerfield novels and created the Faction Paradox series.
He introduced Faction Paradox and the Time Lords' Future War in his 1997 Eighth Doctor novel Alien Bodies. At the time, he never intended for it "It was never supposed to be a big murder-mystery type of thing, with this huge question hovering over it. At the time, I was planning on revealing who the enemy was in the next book I did, but Stephen Cole stopped me doing it."[1]
After the "Gary Mafia at DWM" gave extremely negative reviews to Interference, Miles announced his departure from Doctor Who writing[2] and began work on the Faction Paradox Protocols audio series for BBV Productions.[1] However, he returned to BBC Books in 2002 with The Adventuress of Henrietta Street, which introduced the major recurring villain Sabbath. "I didn't write Adventuress because I had the desperate urge to write another book," Miles said. "I did it because I needed a job."[3] He considered Doctor Who inescapable and feared that he had been "tainted for life",[4] though he would later affectionately call it part of his native mythology.[5]
The first story in the Faction Paradox series, the two-part audio story The Eleven Day Empire and The Shadow Play, was released in 2001. Due to the audios' popularity, BBV Productions switched their previously anthology-style Audio Adventures in Time & Space range to exclusively focus on Faction Paradox audios. However, BBV cancelled its audio line in 2004, ending the Faction Paradox Protocols. Looking for a new publisher, Miles was impressed by the actors at Magic Bullet Productions and reached out to Alan Stevens; though the resultant True History of Faction Paradox series was designed as a stand-alone release, it featured the characters of Justine and Eliza from the Protocols audios.[6]
Meanwhile, the first Faction Paradox book, The Book of the War, was published by Mad Norwegian Press in 2002 with Miles as both main contributor and editor. This release was followed first by Miles' novel This Town Will Never Let Us Go and then by a string of Faction Paradox novels edited by Miles and published by Mad Norwegian. When Mad Norwegian cancelled the line in 2006 and the rights passed to Random Static, Miles continued as editor, but Random Static published only one Faction Paradox novel in 2007 before the rights were passed on to Obverse Books. Miles edited Obverse's first Faction Paradox book, the 2011 anthology A Romance in Twelve Parts, before ending his involvement in the series. However, the first two Obverse-published Faction Paradox novels, Against Nature and The Brakespeare Voyage, had been edited by Miles while he was still working with the range.
In 2003, Miles wrote a Faction Paradox comic, which Mad Norwegian published through Image Comics. Due to a variety of reasons, only two issues of the comic were produced and published; however, at the same time, Mad Norwegian began working with Miles on a series of Doctor Who reference guides.[7] In these "About Time" books, cowritten with Tat Wood, Miles presented his perspective on seasons 1 through 21 of the classic Doctor Who series. Miles would later review many episodes of the modern Doctor Who series on his blog.
Bibliography
Doctor Who
Virgin New Adventures
BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures
- Alien Bodies
- Interference - Book One: Shock Tactic
- Interference - Book Two: The Hour of the Geek
- The Adventuress of Henrietta Street
Bernice Summerfield
Prose
Audio
Faction Paradox
Novels
- The Book of the War (with Simon Bucher-Jones, Daniel O'Mahony, Ian McIntire, Mags L. Halliday, Helen Fayle, Philip Purser-Hallard, Kelly Hale, Jonathan Dennis, & Mark Clapham)
- This Town Will Never Let Us Go
Short stories
Comics
Audio
The Faction Paradox Protocols
- The Eleven Day Empire
- The Shadow Play
- Sabbath Dei
- In the Year of the Cat
- Movers
- A Labyrinth of Histories
The True History of Faction Paradox
- Coming to Dust
- The Ship of a Billion Years
- Body Politic
- Words from Nine Divinities
- Ozymandias
- The Judgment of Sutekh