Warlock
by Andrew Cartmel
Doctor Who: War Trilogy (2), Doctor Who: The New Adventures (34), Doctor Who {non-TV} (Novels — NA Novel)
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Andrew Cartmel was the final script editor on the original run of Doctor Who on tv from 1987-1989, and is known for allegedly having a master plan for the Doctor's story that would be revealed over time. Interestingly, he never wrote a screenplay for a Doctor Who tv screenplay, so it is in books that one gets to see how he'd tell a Doctor Who story. And this one's a doozy.
The Seventh Doctor is living in a cottage near Canterbury with Ace and Benny, using the cottage to carry out research while sending his companions on missions. Benny goes undercover with a top secret drug enforcement agency (called IDEA) in New York to find out about a mysterious new street drug called warlock, while Ace becomes involved in a pair of animal rights show more activists working to undermine animal testing at a nearby research facility.
What's stands out about this book is that the Doctor is hardly involved in the story at all, and it can also go chapters at a time without checking in with Ace or Benny. Full plotlines are carried out by the characters Cartmel invented for the story including the NYPD detective Creed, IDEA agents, the lab researchers conducting experiments, and a couple named Vincent and Justine who have psychic powers (and were introduced in an earlier Cartmel novel). It's a tightly-plotted crime drama with just hints of science fiction/fantasy underpinning. There doesn't even seem to be an extraterrestrial element unless you consider, .... well I won't give away the ending, but readers will probably figure it out well before then.
The strangest thing about this book is that a reader with little to no knowledge of Doctor Who could pick it up and read it as a solid, standalone novel. And it's a strange book which includes things such as human consciousness entering animals, a woman suddenly forced into prostitution and just as quickly rescued, the complete destruction of Canterbury cathedral, and a couple sneaking into Buckingham Palace to have sex, and these are all relatively minor plot points. Whatever you're expecting from a Doctor Who story, this novel will defy expectations. show less
The Seventh Doctor is living in a cottage near Canterbury with Ace and Benny, using the cottage to carry out research while sending his companions on missions. Benny goes undercover with a top secret drug enforcement agency (called IDEA) in New York to find out about a mysterious new street drug called warlock, while Ace becomes involved in a pair of animal rights show more activists working to undermine animal testing at a nearby research facility.
What's stands out about this book is that the Doctor is hardly involved in the story at all, and it can also go chapters at a time without checking in with Ace or Benny. Full plotlines are carried out by the characters Cartmel invented for the story including the NYPD detective Creed, IDEA agents, the lab researchers conducting experiments, and a couple named Vincent and Justine who have psychic powers (and were introduced in an earlier Cartmel novel). It's a tightly-plotted crime drama with just hints of science fiction/fantasy underpinning. There doesn't even seem to be an extraterrestrial element unless you consider, .... well I won't give away the ending, but readers will probably figure it out well before then.
The strangest thing about this book is that a reader with little to no knowledge of Doctor Who could pick it up and read it as a solid, standalone novel. And it's a strange book which includes things such as human consciousness entering animals, a woman suddenly forced into prostitution and just as quickly rescued, the complete destruction of Canterbury cathedral, and a couple sneaking into Buckingham Palace to have sex, and these are all relatively minor plot points. Whatever you're expecting from a Doctor Who story, this novel will defy expectations. show less
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I thought this was a particularly good New Adventure, a partial (though independent) sequel to the much earlier Warhead, taking the Doctor, Ace and Benny to very near-future England and America to deal with a peculiar new drug and a truly horrible animal experimentation centre. I was hooked, and felt that Cartmel managed to control the plot and characters in a very grownup Who story. Looking through my records I can see some of the themes from this and Warhead cropping up in Cartmel's later Who work, but not as well co-ordinated as they are here. Really very impressed.
I thought this was a particularly good New Adventure, a partial (though independent) sequel to the much earlier Warhead, taking the Doctor, Ace and Benny to very near-future England and America to deal with a peculiar new drug and a truly horrible animal experimentation centre. I was hooked, and felt that Cartmel managed to control the plot and characters in a very grownup Who story. Looking through my records I can see some of the themes from this and Warhead cropping up in Cartmel's later Who work, but not as well co-ordinated as they are here. Really very impressed.
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- Canonical title
- Warlock
- Original publication date
- 1995-01-19
- People/Characters
- The Doctor (7th); Dorothy Gale 'Ace' McShane; Bernice Summerfield; Vincent Wheaton; Justine Wheaton; Mrs Woodcott (show all 8); Creed McIlveen; Jack [in Warlock]
- Important places
- Allen Road, Kent, England, UK; Canterbury, Kent, England, UK; England, UK; Kent, England, UK; London, England, UK; New York, USA (show all 10); New York, New York, USA; Russia; United Kingdom; USA
- Original language
- English
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- Members
- 188
- Popularity
- 174,339
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.05)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 1
- ASINs
- 2




























































