Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 21:02, 4 September 2014 by MystExplorer (talk | contribs) (Removing redundant category.)
RealWorld.png

Christmas on a Rational Planet is the fifty-second Virgin New Adventures novel. It features the Seventh Doctor, Chris Cwej and Roz Forrester. Christmas on a Rational Planet is author Lawrence Miles' first novel for the Doctor Who range. He later wrote two novels for Virgin's Virgin Bernice Summerfield New Adventures. He also contributed significant elements to the BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures novels in his novels Alien Bodies and Interference. The beginnings of ideas and elements in those novels can be seen in this novel.

Publisher's summary

"An end to history. An end to certainty. Is that too much to ask?"

December, 1799. Europe is recovering from the Age of Reason, the Vatican is learning to live with Napoleon, and America is celebrating a new era of independence. But in New York State, something is spreading its own brand of madness through the streets. Secret societies are crawling from the woodwork, and there’s a Satanic conspiracy around every corner.

Roz Forrester is stranded in a town where festive cheer and random violence go hand-in-hand. Chris Cwej is trapped on board the TARDIS with someone who’s been trained to kill him. And when Reason itself breaks down, even the Doctor can’t be sure who or what he’s fighting for.

Christmas is coming to town, and the end of civilisation is following close behind...

Plot

to be added

Characters

References

Books

The Doctor

Drugs and medicines

The Doctor

Individuals

  • Stattenheim (of the Stattenheim Remote Control) lived in 16th century Berlin.
  • Chris Cwej spends most of the novel in the TARDIS being terrorised by the Interface.

Locations

Planets

  • On Minyos they cast out the heliomancers from their society.
  • Astra is a terrible place, like many of Earth's colonies in the 25th century.

Theories and concepts

Notes

  • This novel is rumoured to contain a reference to every TV story, although some are very obscure (such as Lincoln being a reference to The Chase or the reference to Gallifreyian prisoner tattoos being a reference to either Spearhead from Space or Doctor Who and the Silurians). It requires a distinctly critical eye to identify them, should the rumour be correct.
This novel's original cover.
  • This novel's original cover was supposedly so unpopular that it was changed before publication.[1]

Continuity

External links

Footnotes

  1. Paul Scoones (November 1996). TSV 49: Review: Christmas on a Rational Planet. NZDWFC. Retrieved on 8th November 2010.
prose stub