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Night of the Humans (novel)

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Revision as of 15:43, 17 May 2011 by Mini-mitch (talk | contribs)
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Night of the Humans was one of three novels featuring the Eleventh Doctor released on 22nd April, 2010.

prose stub

Publisher's summary

"This is the Gyre – the most hostile environment in the galaxy."

250,000 years’ worth of junk floating in deep space, home to the shipwrecked Sittuun, the carnivorous Sollogs, and worst of all – the Humans. The Doctor and Amy arrive on this terrifying world in the middle of an all-out frontier war between Sittuun and Humans, and the clock is already ticking. There’s a comet in the sky, and it’s on a collision course with the Gyre...When the Doctor is kidnapped, it’s up to Amy and “galaxy-famous swashbuckler” Dirk Slipstream to save the day. But who is Slipstream, exactly? And what is he really doing here?

Characters

References

Notes

  • Amy had been expecting the 'planet' to look a more like the moon, suggesting this adventure takes place after Apollo 23 but before subsequent visits to alien planets.
  • Amy recalls her wedding dress that 'she might never wear', and later says that she has 'a big day tomorrow' 250,000 years ago, placing this adventure before The Time of Angels.
  • The NASA deep space probe Pioneer 10 appears as part of the Gyre's Landscape.
  • The Gyre humans' names are all taken from so-called "Spaghetti Westerns". The human leader Django shares his name with the eponymous hero of the 1966 film ; Tuco is a character (played by Eli Wallach) appearing in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (also 1966); while Manco is the name given to Clint Eastwood's "Man With No Name" in For a Few Dollars More.
  • Lake Mono, the lake of acid the humans use to execute their prisoners, may be named after Mono Lake, California, a location used in the Western High Plains Drifter.
  • The smaller craft used by the Sittuun take their names from 20th Century jazz musicians. The buggy, Ella, is named after the singer Ella Fitzgerald, while the "helipod", Bird, takes its name from saxophonist Charlie Parker, whose nickname was "Bird".
  • The Gyre is located in the Battani 045 system. Muhammad ibn Jābir al-Harrānī al-Battānī (c. 858CE - 929CE) was an Arab astronomer and mathematician.
  • The TARDIS is unable to translate the Sittuun language, despite the Doctor claiming it can translate any language, a fact also proved wrong in The Impossible Planet.

Continuity

to be added

Timeline

External links

BBC Shop - Night of the Humans

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