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Paul Sutton (2)

Author of No More Lies

For other authors named Paul Sutton, see the disambiguation page.

8 Works 248 Members 15 Reviews

Works by Paul Sutton

No More Lies (2007) 39 copies
Arrangements for War (2004) — Author — 35 copies
Thicker Than Water (2005) — Author — 33 copies
The Angel of Scutari (1786) — Author — 33 copies
A Life in Pieces (2004) — Contributor — 31 copies
Appropriation (2006) 28 copies
Exotron / Urban Myths (2007) — Author — 28 copies
A Town Called Fortune (2010) 21 copies

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Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Nationality
UK

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Reviews

I listened to the first season and half of The Eight Doctor & Lucie Miller incredibly close together and back to back, so all of them are going to end up with the same review for the moment while I'm fixing up my forgotten rec's and clearing out my Currently Reading Folder (which shouldn't be 40 books, it should be somewhere relatively close to right under ten).

I have loved meeting Eight, and his resigned but inspirational way of being. I love Lucy's moxy, and her mouth. Her mouth may be the best thing on the planet. Even though I know the episodes are roughly the same length as tv episodes, from single one hours to double-extended two hours, somehow they end up feeling like bite-size, leaving me wanting just a little more from every single one.… (more)
 
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wanderlustlover | 1 other review | Dec 26, 2022 |
 
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papyri | 1 other review | Oct 2, 2021 |
A nifty historical, though the portrayals of the historical figures felt a bit off (I did enjoy the Tolstoy crushing on Ace bit, though. Tee and also hee). The bootstrap paradox flavor was appreciated as well. And now I know how the black/white TARDIS stuff got started. Not sure how eager I am to get into that but we'll see...
 
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KateSherrod | 1 other review | Aug 1, 2016 |
Not yet satisfied by her domination of audio dramas, novels, and collections of short stories, Bernice Summerfield now moves into a new format: the trilogy of novellas. A Life in Pieces is made up of three novellas that interlink to make a complete story.  Given the series's success with the interlinked short story format in Life During Wartime and A Life Worth Living, I was looking forward to this, but I actually ended up being somewhat disappointed.  Nothing is bad, but the book never forms a cohesive whole, either.  It doesn't have to, of course... but I think it might want to.

The first story is by Dave Stone, who I always remember as writing the weird stuff.  That's as true as ever here: Bernice and Jason go on vacation... only it turns out they're secretly on reality television?  There's not so much a plot here as a series of jokes, some of which are funny.  Not all of them, unfortunately, and maybe not even most of them, but there were a couple good ones, and one belter. (When Bernice figures out how to circumvent the reality TV cameras, if you're interested.) As a story, it's kinda there: it wants you to laugh, but you don't want to, so everyone is just standing around awkwardly most of the time.

The next is by Paul Sutton, one of my favorite Big Finish writers, as he's penned Arrangements for War, Thicker Than Water, and No More Lies.  His contribution here is very different from those big, emotional stories, but it's still very character-driven.  It follows Adrian Wall, Bev Tarrant, Irving Braxiatel, a couple cops, and a host of criminals on Earth as everyone tries to get their hands on the Purpura Pawn, a valuable artifact from an alien planet that's recently been stolen... by Jason Kane?  It's a dark, tangled story, but Sutton's knack for character strikes; it's perhaps the most insightful story about Adrian and Bev we've ever had, and there's other good stuff, too, especially with the cop character.  Dark and ominous; I'd call it noir if I knew enough about the genre to feel confident enough to make such an assessment.

Finally, there comes a story by Joseph Lidster about Jason's trial for stealing the Purpura Pawn.  It's the flipside of the events in Sutton's tale, told as a series of reconstructed documents a couple generations later. It's an interesting idea, and I like the narrator of the piece, a very likable and driven fellow who is completely and utterly wrong. The thing is, I think I'd prefer to get into Bernice and especially Jason's heads more than the format allows.  Intellectually admirable, and with some good stuff to say about how we try to uncover truth, but it left me kinda cold in the end.

The three stories are all decent at least, but the book feels lopsided. Stone's story is so goofy compared to the other two dark ones, and its tale is completely irrelevant to the later ones, making it feel like it doesn't even belong in the same book.  I like the idea of the book, and I liked the book itself more than I didn't, but I feel like it could have been done better.
… (more)
 
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Stevil2001 | 1 other review | May 16, 2012 |

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Associated Authors

Joseph Lidster Contributor
Colin Baker Performer, Narrator
Maggie Stables Performer, Narrator
Gabriel Woolf Narrator
Gary Russell Director
Lewis Rae Narrator
Bonnie Langford Performer
Jeany Spark Narrator
Sophie Aldred Narrator
Simon Watts Narrator
Philip Oliver Narrator
Rachel Romer Narrator
Mat Dineen Narrator
Ann Bryson Narrator
Sean Brosnan Narrator
Rachel Pickup Narrator
John Albasiny Narrator
Edward Salt Director
Ken Bentley Director
James Parsons Narrator
Alex Lowe Narrator
Richard Earl Narrator
Nick Brimble Narrator
John Duttine Narrator
Peter Davison Performer
Isla Blair Narrator
Claire Wyatt Narrator

Statistics

Works
8
Members
248
Popularity
#92,014
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
15
ISBNs
45

Charts & Graphs