Saturday, February 07, 2026

Review: Doctor Who: The Adventures After

This is another in the current BBC Children's books series of anthologies and follows on from The Adventures Before.  This time we're looking at mini-adventures that happened after certain Doctor Who stories, and it's a mixed bag. Some of the stories are not really sequels and yet the contents pages and subtitle to the book suggest they are.

There are two stories written (or co-written) by stars from the show: Carole Ann Ford (with Rob Craine and Beth Axford) who played Susan in the show has 'The Verge of Death' which follows 'Marco Polo' and picks up on the prior events of 'Inside the Spaceship' where the TARDIS was trying to warn the travellers of danger. The idea is that a psychic creature has got into the ship and is attacking them ... 

And Katy Manning who played Jo has a story which follows 'The Green Death' about the Master attempting to get hold of the Metebelis crystal given to Jo by the Doctor.

Other stories are 'The Face of Fear' by David N Smith which is aligned to 'The Web of Fear' but which is more of a sequel to 'The Faceless Ones' as the Chameleons are back. Paul Magrs provides a proper sequel to 'The Daemons' as the Master (or Missy) is back and the 13th Doctor has to work with an aged Olive Hawthorne to stop Missy from summoning Azal again. Mark Griffiths brings us 'Harry Sullivan and the Chalice of Vengeance' which follows 'The Christmas Invasion' (one of the Sycorax survives and saves his mind which then encounters the 4th Doctor, Sarah and Harry in the future.)  ... Janelle McCurdy has 'The Ashes of Pompeii', a sequel to 'The Fires of Pompeii' (the Doctor and Donna have a second encounter with a Pyrovile)... Alfie Shaw has 'Aftercare', which follows the events of  'The Angels Take Manhattan' (a sad tale of Brian Williams trying to come to terms with Rory's death) ... and finally Beth Axford has 'Save the Earth', aligned to 'Kill the Moon', with clothes that eat people and the Doctor's coat having dimensionally transcendental pockets.

As I've said before about these books, they are aimed at 8-12 year old kids, and as time moves forward, so those kids fast outgrow whatever is being written for them. So an 8 year old in 2025 would have not been born when 'Kill the Moon' was shown, and would have been 6 when 'The Giggle' was transmitted (Ncuti Gatwa's debut) ... and only 1 year old when 'The Woman Who Fell to Earth' was transmitted (Jodie Whittaker's debut) ... my point is that it's hard to see how these kids, who have grown up in a world where Doctor Who is less 'event' and more 'cult' would react to the stories and want to buy them (or have them bought for them).

I feel that around the age of 6 or 7 is when we start to get our 'core memories' (as Inside Out might put it) and kids watching the show for the first time at around that age are more likely to then want to go and find out more ... especially if the watching is a shared experience with friends at school. But for something to be able to tap into that 'shared experience' it needs to be 'shared' ... Look at how well the whole Stranger Things phenomenon has grown ... off the back of Netflix planning and coordinating 'drops' of the episodes so everyone can watch at roughly the same time, and then discuss and want to see what happens next with their friends. Doctor Who just doesn't have the same degree of mass-market take-up these days, and when there is an opportunity to be taken, it tends not to be. 

I really hope that this book and others like it find a market, but I'm really not sure what that market is.


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