Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

The Analysis Bureau (novel)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 14:19, 27 December 2022 by DJAitch (talk | contribs)
RealWorld.png

The Analysis Bureau was a spin-off novel of Lethbridge-Stewart, released by Candy Jar Books in August 2022.

prose stub

Publisher's summary

The Analysis Bureau does not exist. Ask any questions about it, and the same answers always greet you. There's no trace of any department matching that name in any branch of Government, only speculation and wild rumours.

At the beginning of the 1960s, some conspiracy theorists even started to claim that there was a village, once the home to an entire community, abandoned during the Second World War due to flooding. They said it’s where experiments and tests are being carried out. Some even claim that the Analysis Bureau used the village as a base of operations, and that there were underground bunkers built way beneath the rural façade of cottages, shops and even a village green.

Of course, those who got anywhere near the truth disappeared just as quickly as the people who asked too many questions, because they were the ones who refused to believe that there was no such thing as the Analysis Bureau.

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

  • Amelia Stone was friends with a performer named David Jones, the birth name of David Bowie.
  • Mr Quebec is implied to have taken the blame for the events of the original Quatermass story. Grubber was arrested for stealing fragments of a capsule at Knightsbridge, referencing Quatermass and the Pit.
  • Mr Quebec refers to "Dr Quist's team", "Sir Michael Gerrard", and "the Ministry of Research" as other people who could investigate in Incident Two. Quist was the lead of the 1970s show Doomwatch. Sir Michael was the lead in mid-60s show R3 about a unit working for a Ministry of Research.
  • Doctor Anthony Ridge has a brother called John, a reference to Dr John Ridge in Doomwatch.
  • The stories predate the 1968 story The Invasion, and Professor Watkins is featured in The Synthetic Man, detailing his first encounter with Tobias Vaughn and Packer.

Notes

  • The book comprises of four short stories. The first three are interlinked. The fourth story is an unpublished 'lost' Lethbridge-Stewart story, Originally planned as a free on-line story via the Candy Jar Books website, it was held back when it was realised the theme of the Brigadier being imprisoned clashed with the plot of their book Mind Of Stone.
  • The story titles are The Reconnaissance Of Death, The Damocles Project and The Synthetic Man. The 'lost' story is called Hide In Plain Sight.
  • The stories are referred to as 'Incidents' rather than stories, as a tribute to Philip Martin, who called each episode of his TV series, Gangsters, in the same way, instead of calling them Episode One, Episode Two, etc. Martin also worked for Candy Jar Books, who published his third Gangsters novel shortly after he passed away.

Continuity


External links

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.