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Fiction. Science Fiction. HTML:The evil Master leered at the Doctor, and triumphantly pointed out of the cabin window. The many-tentacled Nestene monster – spearhead of the second Auton invasion of Earth – crouched beside the radio tower! Part crab, part spider, part octopus, its single huge eye blazed with alien intelligence and deadly hatred... Can the Doctor outwit his rival Time Lord, the Master, and save the Earth from the Nestene horror? Geoffrey Beevers, who played an incarnation show more of the Master in the classic BBC TV series Doctor Who, reads Terrance Dicks' complete and unabridged novelisation, first published by Target Books in 1975. 'BBC Audiobooks has chosen well with its books and has taken the right approach with its readers... they benefit from new music and sound effects' - Doctor Who Magazine. show less

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4 reviews
The Master, a renegade Time Lord and the Doctor's nemesis, is acting as a sort of Fifth Column element to allow a nefarious alien species called the Nestene to invade the Earth. Their favoured medium is plastic, through which they transmit energy and attack their enemies, particularly as the ruthless Autons. The Doctor repelled a previous Auton invasion, but can he do the same again?

This is a Third Doctor story that introduces one of his assistants, Jo Grant, who may not be the qualified scientist he asked for but who is determined to help the Doctor any way she can, even if it means putting her life in danger. It also features the always-entertaining personality clash between the Doctor and Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. The story show more itself is quite breathlessly thrilling (especially when the Brig and the UNIT soldiers have to blow up the Autons real good!) and very easy to imagine. It was difficult to restrain myself from cheering and groaning aloud as the Doctor's fortunes rose and fell throughout the story, which I read in basically a single day's worth of bus travel. I was cracking through those pages so fast it made the Autons' energy beams seem like peashooters.

One thing I did kind of object to was the fact that Jo seemed to require a lot of consoling hugs from the Doctor, which probably works okay on screen but for some reason looks silly in print, as if the story were written by a girl imagining herself as Jo and nursing a small crush on the Doctor. And to be honest that is a fairly small quibble, considering I would probably go to pieces just as much as she did if I were in that situation. But the rest of the narration was very good, fleshed-out enough to make the book more than the shooting script with some narration stuffed in between the dialogue. I would definitely recommend this if you like Doctor Who and haven't tried out one of the earlier stories (i.e. pre-Ninth Doctor) yet. And don't be surprised if you find yourself giving phone cords a suspicious eye for a while afterward.
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http://nhw.livejournal.com/1033342.html?#cutid1

This is one of Dicks' better efforts - introducing three new regular characters (Jo Grant and the Master both get good introductions here, Mike Yates rather less so) and bringing back the Autons. The Doctor is an inveterate name-dropper, and basically more fun than the character as actually played by Pertwee. It is a very rare case of Dicks actually improving on a Robert Holmes script - certainly when I eventually saw the original TV version I was disappointed that the 'orrible squamous Nestene Consciousness does not actually materialise in sight of the viewer. And it is a taproot text for much else in the later Doctor/Master stories - the radio telescope in Logopolis, the phone call in show more Last of the Time Lords. A good one. show less
The Master vs. the Doctor and UNIT. The Master has living plastic (later seen in the very first episode of New Who), but the Doctor is irrepressible.
Het televisiescript in boekvorm gegoten door Terrance Dicks terwijl de oorspronkelijke schrijver Robert Holmes was. De zeer soepele schrijfstijl maakt het een boekje waarvan de bladzijden worden omgeslagen zonder dat de lezer het doorheeft.

In dit avontuur van de derde Doctor zijn oude vijanden (de Autons) aan zet en worden nieuwe hoofdpersonages (The Master, Jo Grant) geïntroduceerd waarbij de geschiedenis zal leren dat het ook oude vertrouwde figuren in het Doctor Who universum gaan worden.

Dit voor mij bekende televisieverhaal was verfrissend om te lezen. Het is geschreven in een heldere stijl zonder poespas. Zo kan op het televisiescherm het nog wel eens wat langdradig worden, in boekvorm is dat het zeker niet.
De bekende show more hoofdrolspelers zijn herkenbaar zonder dat ze bij naam genoemd worden en de eerste ontmoeting tussen de Doctor en Jo Grant nog eens meemaken een cadeautje.
Als Doctor Who fan ben ik natuurlijk schandalig bevooroordeeld maar als je nog wat luchtigs leuks wil lezen, trek dan deze pocket uit de stapel tweedehandsboeken overal verkrijgbaar.
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292+ Works 23,309 Members

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Canonical title
Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons
People/Characters
The Doctor (3rd); Jo Grant; Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart (Brigadier); The Master; Mike Yates (Captain); John Benton (Sergeant) (show all 14); Rex Farrel; McDermott; George Philips; Albert Goodge; Luigi Rossini; John Farrel; Mary Farrel; Tony
First words
Luigi Rossini came down the steps of his caravan and looked about him in satisfaction.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)With renewed determination he returned to his work.
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6054 .I355 .D648Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
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290
Popularity
110,516
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.40)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
3