Friday, December 05, 2025

Review: First Light - The Science Fiction Art of Alex Storer

I'm a sucker for art books, I love the collected works of people far more talented than I am at painting and drawing and illustration ... and so this new collection from Alex Storer is right up my street.

First Light collects together  many of Storer's pieces of fantastic art and is presented thematically: Cities, Stars, Worlds, Environments and finishing with a selection of book covers that he has created.

'Cities' presents some marvellously gothic creations. 'Daybreak' is a smashing vista of a man looking out at a purple and violet hued cityscape at sunrise, across a river, while a cat watches the man ... marvellously forlorn and evocative, the image has a hint of peace about it ...

'Thalassa' meanwhile is a drowned cityscape. The tops of skyscrapers poke through the waters, while taller structures are visible through the watery air. Another very evocative piece.

The images range from the neon drenched 'Night Shift' to lovers running across a green meadow ... Cities of all types are represented.

'Stars' presents spacescapes and rocket ships and spacestations ... all hanging in the inky star studded void. These are fascinating and serene.

'Worlds' goes to the planets and we have twin moons, space suited explorers, underwater creatures and incredible vistas.

'Environments' is similar, but focussing on specific conditions: ice and snow, caverns and tunnels dominate.

And finally the book covers for authors like Alice Sabo, Terry Grimwood and Andrew Hook. All great evocative cover imagery which makes you want to pick the books concerned up: the prime function of a cover!





All in all this 80 page book is a tremendous celebration of the imagination of Alex Storer and of a love of art and colour and shade and of incredible sights hitherto unseen. It's well worth a look!

Copies are available from Amazon at: https://amzn.eu/d/8GIDLHD

Thursday, December 04, 2025

Review: The Moon Cruise by Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson

The Moon Cruise is the latest Doctor Who novel from Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson, and is her first original novel for the BBC's range. Previously she wrote the novelisation of 'The Church on Ruby Road'.

In line with the other recent novels, The Moon Cruise is a short book clocking in at 189 pages. The story sees the 15th Doctor and Belinda part way through his second season (the novel places the action after the story 'The Well' when the Doctor is still taking vindicator readings from various places in his attempt to get Belinda back to Earth).

Here they arrive on what the Doctor thinks is a deserted asteroid, but which is reality one of the service corridors for a fantastic space cruise experience named The Moon Cruise. The ship is owned and run by Marilyn Moon, a character inexplicably modelled on singer and actress Marilyn Monroe, and as the Doctor and Belinda soon discover, the ship and its crew and its modus operandi are not at all what they seem.

The workers are prisoners, serving out a sentence which rises with every minor infraction, and Belinda ends up taking the place of one of them. The Doctor has to rescue her and so joins forces with the worker she replaced, a green-haired girl named Jax, to infiltrate the upper levels of the ship and to find out the truth behind the whole setup. But there are robotic guards everywhere, and giant centipedes roaming the lower levels ...

The novel has quite a few welcome influences from Doctor Who. We have, of course, the other space cruise liner story, 'Voyage of the Damned' with its robotic angelic Hosts and an owner, Max Capricorn, who isn't exactly human himself. Then there's elements from 'The Greatest Show in the Galaxy' with the robot clowns, and also 'The Long Game' where the humans down below are controlled by a mysterious entity on the upper floors, reached by a single lift. It feels like a Doctor Who story, which is great.

Jikiemi-Pearson blends all these ideas together well, and her writing flows nicely, bringing the reader quickly through the story. The idea that the robotic guards have human parts inside also brings to mind 'Frontios' where the Tractators used human body parts to power their mining machines, or, indeed 'The Girl in the Fireplace' where the Regency Clockwork Men used human parts to fix up the spaceship they were travelling in. One thing I wasn't quite sure about was why there were giant centipedes and ember-emitting fungus in the lower floors - there's some words about how they just grew and multiplied there, but this is just Belinda's assumption - but it all adds to the suspense and provides for some great action sequences.

Overall the story doesn't really feel like a 15th Doctor adventure though, and in some respects I could 'see' the same story being told in the same way with any of the incarnations of the Doctor being involved. It's an enjoyable and action packed book, and once it gets going, it just keeps on going ... 

It's a diverting and enjoyable read and I had a lot of fun with it. A good way to pass an afternoon.

Wednesday, December 03, 2025

Review: Evolution by Andrew Skilleter

I'm a sucker for lovely art books, and this is partly why Telos has been dipping into publishing them over recent years.  Andrew Skilleter is an artist whose name is almost synonymous with Doctor Who. He has done so much over the years, creating cover art, posters, books, bookmarks and many other visual expressions related to the show.

He has published several artbooks himself, collecting much of his Doctor Who output, and you'd perhaps think that there wasn't much left for him to publish. However. Andrew is still working and has been creating new art for this book he calls Evolution. Partly because it showcases an evolution in his style to a more fluid form, and encompassing photography as well: basically making full use of the tools currently available to artists to create new and interesting work.

And that's what this book is: new and interesting. From the impressive gold embossed cover with a part fabric spine overlap, the book screams quality. It's been produced in limited numbers, all signed by the artist, and here we find the opening pages presenting new imagery of the Doctors.

Each spread is accompanied by a quote from the show, which Andrew explains, acts as a jumping off point to new adventures and ideas. So here we have companion Peri Brown reimagined as a 'space adventurer' in a red skirt and cape, wearing white gloves and holding a Star Trek-like phaser pistol. There's River Song in a very Jim Burns spaceship, an exploding Cyberman, a painting of Nyssa of Traken as some flying fey being, the Rani: all aloof and with another flowing red cape ... the imagery is impressive and it works. 

Following a central gallery of commissioned work and pencils showing a different side to Andrew's art, and presented as being 'The Under Gallery' presided over by the Curator, we have more fantastic imagery: Leela swimming underwater; Arizona Amy striding through the desert; Romana mk1 wearing a shiny blue catsuit and beside another Burnsian space car; while Romana Mk2 is flying through the air in a black catsuit and boots. 

There's a section on the Daemons, with new imagery of the Master and Azal, followed by other daemonic forces like the Malus and the Fendahl, the Haemovores and the Destroyer.

Andrew's classic 'poster prints' are reimagined as Radio Times covers next and they work very well indeed in this form, and then we're onto Jamie against a Highland background; Ace as a battle-suited marine, and Sarah Jane as a 'Spacegirl' dressed in another shiny spacesuit; Cybermen; Zoe; Missy; Captain Jack;  and finally of course, a Dalek.

The whole book is a joy! 

It's available from Andrew's store at https://andrewskilleter.com/store-gallery/doctor-who/drwho-books/evolution-doctor-who-arta-new-dimension/