Human Nature (novel)
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Human Nature was the thirty-eighth novel in the Virgin New Adventures series. It was released as an ebook on the BBC's website in November 2002. One of the most highly regarded New Adventures, it formed the basis of Paul Cornell's two part story Human Nature / The Family of Blood for the third series of BBC Wales' Doctor Who.
Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]
1995 Virgin Books Edition[[edit] | [edit source]]
"Who's going to save us this time?"
April, 1914. The inhabitants of the little Norfolk town of Farringham are enjoying an early summer, unaware that war is on the way. Amongst them is Dr John Smith, a short, middle-aged history teacher from Aberdeen. He's having a hard time with his new post as house master at Hulton College, a school dedicated to producing military officers.
Bernice Summerfield is enjoying her holiday in the town, getting over the terrible events that befell her in France. But then she meets a future Doctor, and things start to get dangerous very quickly. With the Doctor she knows gone, and only a suffragette and an elderly rake for company, can Benny fight off a vicious alien attack? And will Dr Smith be able to save the day?
2015 BBC Books Edition[[edit] | [edit source]]
Hulton College in Norfolk is a school dedicated to producing military officers. With the First World War about to start, the boys of the school will soon be on the front line. But no one expects a war – not even Dr John Smith, the college's new house master...
The Doctor's friend Benny is enjoying her holiday in the same town. But then she meets a future version of the Doctor, and things start to get dangerous very quickly. With the Doctor she knows gone, and only a suffragette and an elderly rake for company, can Benny fight off a vicious alien attack? And will Dr Smith be able to save the day?
An adventure set in Britain on the eve of the First World War, featuring the Seventh Doctor as played by Sylvester McCoy and his companion Bernice Summerfield. This book was the basis for the Tenth Doctor television story Human Nature / The Family of Blood starring David Tennant.
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
to be added
Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]
Main characters[[edit] | [edit source]]
Other characters[[edit] | [edit source]]
In the beer tent
The boys at Hulton Academy
- Timothy Dean
- Anand
- Andrew Abbott
- Clive Alton (a Time Lord)
- Hadleigh-Scott
- Hutchinson
- Captain Merryweather
- Phipps
People of Farringham
- Jill and Jenny
- Mrs Windrush
- Mr Hodges
- Constance Harding
- Mr Sangster
- Alec
- Sergeant Abeland
- Constable Bickerston
- Nathan Bottomley
- Horace
- Richard Hadleman
School teachers
- George Rocastle
- Mrs Denman
- Mr Challpner
- Mr Moffat
- Miss Robertson
Soldiers outside the time barrier
Time Lords in a possible future of Gallifrey
Seen orbiting the planet
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
Astronomical objects[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Aubertides state that Earth is in the arm of Mutter's Spiral in the Stellarian Galaxy, whilst Gallifrey is at the core.
Biology[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Timothy Dean becomes infected with the Doctor's Time Lord DNA and gains a second heart and a respiratory bypass system. He is hanged by his classmates, but is saved by his respiratory bypass system.
Foods and beverages[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Benny drinks six pints on the planet Crex.
- The Doctor hates pears.
- Benny refers to Mr Kipling pies. Bottomley thinks she is referring to Rudyard Kipling.
Individuals[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Herbert Asquith is the prime minister.
- Bernice Summerfield is thirty-two years old. She pretends to be Smith's niece.
- John Smith claims to be forty eight years old.
- Joan Redfern gives Wolsey to the Seventh Doctor so that he will never be alone on his travels.
- John's faked credentials claim he is from the Flavian Academy of Aberdeen.
- John plays cricket.
- Joan compares John to Walt Whitman.
- Joan's husband, Arthur, died in a war.
- Alexander Shuttleworth is Benny's landlord. His uncle fought in the Second Boer War.
- Greeneye pretends to be the tenth incarnation of the Doctor.
- Richard enlisted in the army in 1914 and earned the rank of Captain. He fought in the Battle of the Somme in July 1916.
- Timothy Dean worked in the Red Cross during World War I and died in 1995 with many children and grandchildren.
- Clive Alton is a Time Lord, undercover as a student to ensure the situation remains under control.
- John and Joan often play whist.
Influences[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Paul Cornell was heavily inspired by Joseph Campbell's The Hero With a Thousand Faces, in particular the stage known as the “apotheosis”, in which a hero gave up everything in order to gain enlightenment.
Languages[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Cruk is a profanity which Greeneye and Benny often use.
Literature[[edit] | [edit source]]
- A boy reads the magazine Boy's Own.
- Bernice finds copies of Le Morte D'Arthur and A Study in Scarlet in a bookshop.
- When speaking to Timothy about the morality of war, John quotes from Henry V.
- John writes children's stories, including The Old Man and the Police Box, about a lonely elderly man who invented a police box that was bigger on the inside. The man travelled to the planet Gallifrey and there encountered a primitive tribe and showed them many secrets of the universe.
Occupations[[edit] | [edit source]]
- John Smith and Joan Redfern work at Hulton College.
- John Smith is a history teacher.
- Joan Redfern is a science teacher. She doesn't like teaching at the school.
Organisations[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Constance is a suffragette and a member of the WSPU. She is modelling herself on Emily Davison.
- Richard Hadleman attends the local Labour group. He intends to become a local MP.
- Greeneye refers to Interventionists, members of the Celestial Intervention Agency.
- The Doctor takes the pod to the Monks of Felsecar.
Personifications of concepts[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Death collects Smith as a life owed by the Doctor.
Species[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Aubertides are from the planet Aubris. They are shape-shifters, and reproduce asexually via buds on their backs.
- The Doctor has created a clay model of a Zygon.
Time Lords[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor claims that Time Lords dream of what it is to be able to fly, be a different sex or to have a child.
Titles[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Bernice describes herself as the current occupier of the Proxima University Chair Of Archaeology and holder of the Martian Gallantry Medal.
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- A television adaptation of this story appeared in the 2007 series of Doctor Who, entitled Human Nature/The Family of Blood, with several changes in the story.
- A prelude to this novel was published in DWM 226.
- The novel features a sequence where Greeneye meets Bernice whilst pretending to be the tenth incarnation of the Doctor. Coincidentally, the television adaptation featured the Tenth Doctor as portrayed by David Tennant.
- This novel was the second to be re-released by BBCi on the official Doctor Who website in ebook form, in November 2002. It was accompanied by extensive notes and commentary from author Paul Cornell and new illustrations from artist Daryl Joyce. The ebook featured minor differences from the original text, most notably the censorship of Joan's use of the N-word. It became inaccessible in 2010.
- The novel was reprinted as part of The History Collection in February 2015, with a new cover and introduction by Cornell.
- This novel marks the first time the Doctor is shown to kiss someone romantically, though he is someone else at the time. The Doctor would not be shown to kiss someone on screen until the following year when the Eighth Doctor kisses Grace in the TV movie.
Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Death takes Smith as the life the Doctor promised her during PROSE: Love and War.
- Benny is still thinking of Guy de Carnac's death after the events of PROSE: Sanctuary.
- Benny recalls Ace's departure during PROSE: Set Piece.
- Whilst discussing Benny's device, the Doctor claims he threw away the manual, just as he did when he first took control of the TARDIS. (AUDIO: The Beginning)
- Benny isn't convinced she'll ever have children. She later had a son, Peter in PROSE: The Squire's Crystal.
- John Smith tells his students about Boudica's failed revolt against the Roman Empire in Roman Britain in 60. In AUDIO: The Wrath of the Iceni the Fourth Doctor and his companion Leela encountered the Iceni Queen shortly before her army's attack on the Roman capital city of Camulodunum in the midst of the rebellion.
- Benny claims John's brother Jonathan has returned to Gallifrey in Ireland. (TV: The Hand of Fear)
- John recalls knowing a Barbara in Rome, a memory of TV: The Romans.
- John recalls a man with a beard who always upset his experiments, a memory of the Master, first seen in TV: Terror of the Autons.
- In the story The Old Man and the Police Box, John writes of how the people of Gallifrey can no longer have children, which would be explored in PROSE: Lungbarrow.
- The Doctor claims that Time Lords dream of what it would be like to become the opposite sex. The Eleventh Doctor would later state he knew the Corsair in both male and female incarnations, indicating they could change sex during regeneration. (TV: The Doctor's Wife [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Wife (TV story)"]) This was later confirmed when the Master regenerated into a woman. (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) The Doctor himself eventually regenerated into a female body. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
- Alexander is surprised to learn that Bernice received military training. (PROSE: Love and War)
- John says that he is Merlin, which was first mentioned in TV: Battlefield.
- Wrightson briefly communicates with Nemesis as she passes by the Earth. (TV: Silver Nemesis)
- John says that Newton was a very bad-tempered man. His fourth incarnation mentioned meeting him before (TV: The Pirate Planet) and later met him in his fifth (AUDIO: Summer) and fourteenth incarnations. (TV: Wild Blue Yonder)
- The Doctor says he could assume the identity of John Smith again, but that it wouldn't be the same John Smith, which would later be seen in TV: Human Nature [+]Loading...["Human Nature (TV story)"]/The Family of Blood [+]Loading...["The Family of Blood (TV story)"].
- John mentions living seaweed to Joan, much to her amusement. (TV: Fury from the Deep)
- The Doctor tells Bernice about Oolians and Oolis. (PROSE: Original Sin)
- When drawing on the Doctor's personality, John says "there's another way" (TV: Warriors of the Deep) and "throw away your gun". (TV: The Happiness Patrol)
- When Wolsey enters the Doctor's TARDIS, he smells, that there was another cat there some time ago, but now it is gone. This can be interpreted as both Lynx (PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible, Cat's Cradle: Warhead, Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark) and/or Antranak (AUDIO: The Eye of the Scorpion, No Place Like Home, Nekromanteia).
- "Verity", who John Smith meets here, can be interpreted as an unintended vision/foreshadowing of Patience (PROSE: Cold Fusion, AUDIO: Cold Fusion).
Illustrations[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Includes seventeen illustrations from the e-book by Daryl Joyce, originally published on the BBC's website.
Additional cover images[[edit] | [edit source]]
2015 edition. Cover by Two Associates.
Audiobook[[edit] | [edit source]]
- This novel was released as an audiobook on 20 August 2015 complete and unabridged by BBC Audio and read by Lisa Bowerman.
External links[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Human Nature at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Discontinuity Guide to: Human Nature at The Whoniverse
- The Cloister Library: Human Nature
- Prelude to Human Nature as published in DWM #226