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The Resurrection Casket was the ninth novel in the BBC New Series Adventures series. It was written by Justin Richards and featured the Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler.
It was released on 13 April 2006, just two days before the first episode of David Tennant's first series was aired.
Publisher's summary
Starfall — a world on the edge, where crooks and smugglers hide in the gloomy shadows and modern technology refuses to work. And that includes the TARDIS.
The pioneers who used to be drawn by the hope of making a fortune from the mines can find easier picking elsewhere. But they still come, for the romance of it, or in the hope of finding the lost treasure of Hamlek Glint — scourge of the spaceways, privateer, adventurer, bandit...
Will the TARDIS ever work again? Is Glint's lost treasure waiting to be found? And does the fabled Resurrection Casket — the key to eternal life — really exist? With the help of new friends, and facing terrifying enemies, the Doctor and Rose aim to find out...
Plot
to be added
Characters
Worldbuilding
Planets
- Starfall is a mining planet near the Gerossic Rift with advanced steam-powered technology.
- Planets near to Starfall include Maginot, Metallurgis Five, Jathros and possibly Salarius.
- Scotia is a mining colony outside the zeg.
TARDIS
- The EMP of the zeg, which renders the TARDIS inoperative and causes the console to explode. As a safety measure, the TARDIS doors shut and won't open until the ship has repaired itself and is no longer in danger.
- Only the sprockets, wockets, and mergin nuts are invulnerable
Food and Beverages
- The Doctor drinks grog in the Broken Spyglass. Rose drinks grog and water.
- Kevin eats kronkburgers
Species
- Krarks live in space and resemble sharks without fins and with tails that end in a sharp point. They can store immense amount of an oxygen-rich gas and move by releasing it in bursts from tiny round holes in their sides. They suck the gas out of the upper atmosphere of planets or moons and compress it, so that they can store it for months. They will rip ships apart to get at the gas inside, including the gas stored in people's lungs.
Science & Technology
- Kevin detects the Black Shadow parchment from the way it resonates between the dimensions due to the precise polygonal structure of the shape and the molecular composition of the ink.
- A zeg is a zone of electromagnetic radiation that interferes with anything that has an electrical circuit.
- A mining belt near the Starfall zeg is rich in trisilicate.
- Nucleo-burn engines have unique energy signatures that can be tracked, and this signature can be calculated by analysis of objects that have been on board the ship.
- Escape pods from Dressonian freighter has an atmosphere and rudimentary propulsion based on gas turbines.
Notes
- There are some instances where Jimm is misspelled "Jim".
- Later reprints of this book removed the image of Billie Piper from the cover.
- This story was also released as an ebook available from the Amazon Kindle store.
Continuity
- The Doctor has everlasting matches which the First Doctor also had (and claimed to have invented) in PROSE: Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks. The Tenth Doctor explains how they work whereas the First Doctor does not.
- Trisilicate was the mineral in TV: The Monster of Peladon.
- The psychic paper first appeared in TV: Rose.
- Rose remembers that the Ninth Doctor blew up her job when they first met, (TV: Rose) then took her to see her sun blow up (TV: The End of the World) and then her government was blown up too. (TV: World War Three)
- The Third Doctor also faced a similar situation where his TARDIS refused to function in the presence of a technology inhibiting force, while on the planet Exxilon. (TV: Death to the Daleks)
- The Doctor makes a remark about not getting a five-million-mile factory warranty on New Earth. (TV: New Earth)
Editions published outside Britain
- Published in China by New Star Press in July 2021 as a paperback edition.
Additional cover images
Audiobook
- This novel was released as an audiobook on 3 July 2006 by BBC Audio and read by David Tennant.