Thursday, September 11, 2025

Review: Doctor Who Icons: Shirley Jackson and Fela Kuti

The latest two short novellas in the BBC's Doctor Who Icons series cover possibly two of the most obscure people they could have picked. My earlier complaints about this series remain: there is nothing in the books to explain what they are doing, or the themes they are playing with. I assume that in the days of the internet and Google, they expect readers to do their own research!

Shirley Jackson and the Chaos Box is up first, and Kalynn Bayron has delivered the slightest of tales which involves the fifteenth Doctor unexpectedly turning out to be a massive fan of the writer Shirley Jackson (who I have heard of!), and so taking Ruby to first see her house, and then back in time to meet the lady herself. 

It all revolves around Jackson's story The Lottery, which is explained at some length in the text, and, co-incidentally, there is a strange box in her past which may be the inspiration for the story. The text, however is slight, and, frankly, any horror writer could have been substituted and it would have made no difference. The sci-fi trappings involve a race of aliens who are nice to everyone, and a couple of them who decide that it would be better if everyone was angry and chaotic.

Sadly there's really not much more to say here. It's nicely written and takes place between 'The Devil's Chord' and 'Boom' on television ... and as such I didn't spot the appearance of a Susan Triad clone unless it's very well hidden!

The other title is One Night Only (A Fela Kuti Story) by Tade Thompson, and I had never heard of Fela Kuti and so needed to Google (he was a Nigerian musician and political activist). The story this time features the fourth Doctor, Sarah Jane Smith, Harry Sullivan and the Brigadier faced with an invasion of brain-tapping flying aliens. It's quite a fun little tale, but complex, and Fela Kuti ends up helping the team to solve the problem that is facing them. However as with the Jackson book, it could probably have been any musician.

The two books together I found somewhat unsatisfying. They are both very short (Jackson is 85 pages while Kuti is 94 pages) and the action whizzes past in a flash. Compared with the other Doctor Who series that BBC Children's Books has been running, where the books play homage to other works of literature (Dracula, Frankenstein, Alice in Wonderland and so on), these seem to be written for a much younger age group.

Doctor Who's original remit was to entertain and educate, and these two titles certainly do that. Hopefully they are finding readers among the younger set who are then inspired to go and find out more.



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