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Rona Munro

Author of Doctor Who: Survival

34+ Works 454 Members 14 Reviews

Works by Rona Munro

Doctor Who: Survival (1990) 160 copies
Janet and John: Through the Garden Gate (1939) — Author — 38 copies
Doctor Who: Survival [DVD] (2007) — Writer — 36 copies
The James Plays (2014) 29 copies
Iron (2002) 18 copies
Donny's Brain (2016) 18 copies
Janet and John Book 1 (1949) 9 copies
Bold Girls (1993) 9 copies
Last Witch, The (2010) 8 copies
Pack (2012) 7 copies
Little Eagles (2012) 6 copies

Associated Works

Captain Corelli's Mandolin (1993) — Playwright adaptor, some editions — 8,003 copies
Mary Barton (1848) — Adapter, some editions — 2,683 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1959-09-07
Gender
female
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland

Members

Reviews

I especially enjoyed Sophie Winkleman (Two and a Half Men) as Emma.
 
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TraSea | 4 other reviews | Apr 29, 2024 |
A pleasant surprise. The TV episode struck me as being an uncomfortable marriage of tones, and a little too abruptly resolved to have room for a big scene at the end in the TARDIS that wasn't in the original script. All of that is gone in the novel; the story gets far more breathing space, creating a real atmosphere. Some of Munro's prose can be a little overzealous (the Doctor's words "burst from his mouth," apparently), and I think it's fair to assume she doesn't find the traditional Who setup very interesting. Once the story gets going, though, it pulls you right along, especially in the excellent new middle section that contrasts the experiences of the Pict and Roman characters. The end of the book even achieves an elegiac tone - very rare for what is basically mid-grade genre fiction.… (more)
 
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saroz | 1 other review | Sep 16, 2023 |
https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/doctor-who-the-eaters-of-light-by-rona-munro/

Rona Munro is the only person to have written stories for both Old Who and New Who, having scripted the very last Seventh Doctor story before the cancellation, and then this story for the last Peter Capaldi season. I also saw one of her other plays at the Web Theatre in Newtownards in 2013, a single-actor piece with the only member of the cast playing three parts. I can’t remember the name of the piece, but research suggests it may have been “Women Behaving Madly”.

The Eaters of Light is a rare Doctor Who story set in Scotland (though filmed of course ni Wales) – especially considering that Capaldi and Moffatt are both Scottish, it’s a little surprising that they did not go there more often. It’s less surprising that they got a Scottish writer of the calibre of Munro to take them there. I rewatched the story before reading the new novelisation, and as I had expected, I enjoyed it a lot. (Here’s the BBC page if you want to refresh yourself quickly.)

The Twelfth Doctor, Bill and Nardole arrive in Scotland and decide to investigate the disappearance of the Ninth Legion. They travel back to the first century AD and get involved in the local conflict between Picts and Romans, but manage to persuade both to unite in the face of a Cthulhoid alien enemy attempting to breach the boundaries of the universe. It’s a very simple plot, but it’s very nicely done, with some nice reveals when, for instance, Bill becomes aware of the TARDIS translation circuits, or the two factions realise just how young each other are. At the end of the episode there’s a coda with Missy being released from imprisonment by the Doctor. Season Thirteen is my favourite of the Capaldi seasons and this story is one of the reasons why.

The novelisation of the story, also by Rona Munro, was one of the few Doctor Who books released in 2022. The book, as with the best Who novelisations, brings more joyous detail to the plot and fills out the author’s intentions. (174 pages for 45 minutes is pretty generous by the historical standards of novelisations – compare the 143 pages that Terrance Dicks got for ten 25-minute episodes of The War Games.) It turns very much into a story of Picts and Romans, with the Doctor and friends intervening in a local story. This makes the ending, where they reject the Doctor’s help and take responsibility for guarding the Gate themselves, all the stronger. Some of the nicer one-liners are lost, but this is a differently shaped story and in some ways it is stronger for it. The scene with Missy at the end is omitted. Strongly recommended.
… (more)
 
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nwhyte | 1 other review | Apr 1, 2023 |
I would have liked to hear the lines that were added to the end of the episode, but otherwise it was a good novelisation of the last episode of Classic Doctor Who.
 
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jgranger221 | 1 other review | Dec 21, 2020 |

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Statistics

Works
34
Also by
2
Members
454
Popularity
#54,064
Rating
3.9
Reviews
14
ISBNs
65

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