The Chimes of Midnight is an eighth Doctor adventure, and the companion is Charley Pollard, a creation for the Big Finish audio adventures of that Doctor. As a novelisation, it works really well, and Shearman manages to create bags of atmosphere in a story which is redolent of past tales like 'The Celestial Toymaker' and 'The Space Museum', with tones of more recent fare like 'Ghost Light' and 'The Giggle' in there as well.
The Doctor and Charley find themselves at Christmas in an old house, where they seem to be at odds with reality in that they cannot interact with anything. As the clock chimes, so they find themselves faced with a murder, and the Doctor starts to investigate. But nothing is as it seems, and reality bends and twists around them, with the staff of the house behaving strangely, time speeding up, and the TARDIS blocked from them. It's a strange tale which maintains the mystery far beyond the half way point (when one might expect some answers to start to appear).
I enjoyed the read, the text is eloquent and the characters all leap from the page.
As an experiment to see if novelisations of the Big Finish audios might work, then it's a worthy start. After all there are rather a lot of those audios out there now to draw on in the future should BBC Books deem it worthwhile.
Also available is the traditional Doctor Who Annual, again written by Paul Lang, and this time with a story from Pete McTighe (a prequel to 'Lucky Day'). As with previous Annuals, we're following a tested format, and here there's an introduction from actress Varada Sethu who played Belinda Chandra, followed by pages looking at the various characters and stories from the last season (and the Christmas special which preceded it), the pantheon of powerful creatures (including the new-look Sutekh), some games and puzzles, a feature on Mrs Flood. a cartoon strip based on the animated sequence from 'Lux', a piece on Susan, the Doctor's granddaughter, and a spread from the colourised version of 'The Daleks'.As mentioned in previous reviews, there's a lot that goes into the Annual to try and make it interesting and diverse for the younger reader, and the team have again done a sterling job. I do wonder what the 2027 annual might bring next year as there's no new Who on television for it to use as a backbone. Maybe a more general look back over the show's past?
Another 'new' title is Doctor Who: Where's The Doctor? which is a Where's Wally-type book with 14 spreads of detailed illustration in which you have to find the Doctor, plus various other elements (detailed at the back) which you can also look out for.
The illustrations by Pablo Gallego and Jorge Santillan are charming, and the book claims to draw on work previously published in When's the Doctor? (2012) and Find the Doctor (2013). The strange thing here is that Find the Doctor was actually a complete reprint of material from When's the Doctor? and Where's the Doctor? (2013) the latter of which featured illustrations from Jamie Smart, whose work is not included in this book. ('Shackleton's Expedition', 'Metebelis III', 'Ancient Egypt', 'Ancient Greek Olympics', 'The End of the World', 'TARDIS Graveyard' and 'Victorian London' are all taken from When's the Doctor and thus by Jorge Santillan. There are therefore eight new pieces by Pablo Gallego (presumably) in this book.)There's also an updated version of the Greatest Monsters book from a few years back available. Obviously reprinting, repackaging and updating of older material is the order of the day!



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