James Parsons (1)
Autor(a) de LIVE 34
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4+ Works 72 Membros 5 Reviews
Obras de James Parsons
Doctor Who The Sixth Doctor Adventures: The Sixth Doctor and Peri - Volume 1 (2020) — Autor — 4 cópias
Associated Works
Etiquetado
2000s (2)
21st century (2)
7th Doctor (7)
Ace (6)
andrew stirling-brown (2)
audio (12)
audio drama (6)
audio08 (2)
audiobook (3)
audiodramas (1)
benny (2)
Bernice Summerfield (2)
bfa (1)
Big Finish (16)
Big Finish 2017 bundle (1)
big finish audio (1)
Big Finish Audio CD (1)
CD (9)
Davros (5)
Doctor Who (31)
drama (2)
fiction (3)
Hex (6)
Humble Bundle (2)
i davros (1)
james parsons (2)
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read (2)
read in 2021 (1)
science fantasy (2)
science fiction (10)
sf (4)
Skaro (1)
speculative fiction (2)
spin-off (2)
Thals (1)
The Doctor (2)
time travel (2)
to-read (2)
Whoverse (1)
Conhecimento Comum
- Data de nascimento
- 20th century
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- UK
- Ocupação
- actor
designer
Membros
Resenhas
Marcado
rabbitprincess | 1 outra resenha | Dec 30, 2021 | https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3218963.html
Another short and digestible Bernice Summerfield novel, with two nicely intertwined timelines about a crashed spaceship and a randy corporate sponsor, it only becoming clear at the end of a short book how the two are related to each other. Minor but enjoyable.
½Another short and digestible Bernice Summerfield novel, with two nicely intertwined timelines about a crashed spaceship and a randy corporate sponsor, it only becoming clear at the end of a short book how the two are related to each other. Minor but enjoyable.
Marcado
nwhyte | 1 outra resenha | Jul 14, 2019 | The novels haven't exactly been a highlight of Bernice Summerfield's "Legion era," though this one isn't terrible. It's not as good as The Slender-Fingered Cats of Bubastis, though I did find more to interest me here than in rel="nofollow" target="_top">The Weather on Versimmon. This is a mostly standalone adventure for Benny, Ruth, and Jack (with small parts for Peter and Irving), set during the New Frontiers box set (between episodes 1 and 2, specifically). In parallel plotlines, the trio meet a chip tycoon who's very interested in archaeology and rescue a disabled cargo ship.
The book is well written and interesting enough. The writers have a good grasp on the main characters' voices, and know how to write an interesting action sequence. Moving between the two parallel plotlines maintains the reader's interest; it actually takes a long time to figure out how the two plots actually fit together. Once you figure it out, though, it's a bit underwhelming, and one suspects the novel was structured this way because doing it chronologically would reveal how little it actually has going on. If the crashed ship story was inserted where it goes chronologically, it would be a long, irrelevant diversion from the book's main plot. The main plot isn't much: a wealthy person is sponsoring archaeology, but he turns out to have a hidden agenda. A man is sexually interested in Bernice, but he's just taking advantage of her. These are surely clichés of Benny's solo adventures at this point. It would be more of a twist if it turned out everything was aboveboard. And the bit where he comes back at the end to torture her once the main story is over feels like padding when the authors realized they were thirty pages short; it goes nowhere and does nothing.
For those keeping score, this book features the third popular resort planet within easy flight of Legion, the supposed most distant planet in the galaxy (after ones in Road Trip and The Slender-Fingered Cats). More than that, Benny is popping back and forth between Legion and worlds of significance all the time in this book, rather undermining the setting of the Legion era.… (mais)
The book is well written and interesting enough. The writers have a good grasp on the main characters' voices, and know how to write an interesting action sequence. Moving between the two parallel plotlines maintains the reader's interest; it actually takes a long time to figure out how the two plots actually fit together. Once you figure it out, though, it's a bit underwhelming, and one suspects the novel was structured this way because doing it chronologically would reveal how little it actually has going on. If the crashed ship story was inserted where it goes chronologically, it would be a long, irrelevant diversion from the book's main plot. The main plot isn't much: a wealthy person is sponsoring archaeology, but he turns out to have a hidden agenda. A man is sexually interested in Bernice, but he's just taking advantage of her. These are surely clichés of Benny's solo adventures at this point. It would be more of a twist if it turned out everything was aboveboard. And the bit where he comes back at the end to torture her once the main story is over feels like padding when the authors realized they were thirty pages short; it goes nowhere and does nothing.
For those keeping score, this book features the third popular resort planet within easy flight of Legion, the supposed most distant planet in the galaxy (after ones in Road Trip and The Slender-Fingered Cats). More than that, Benny is popping back and forth between Legion and worlds of significance all the time in this book, rather undermining the setting of the Legion era.… (mais)
Marcado
Stevil2001 | 1 outra resenha | Jan 11, 2019 | Live-34 is an excellent experiment in format. The story is told as four half-hour episodes of live radio on Colony 34. The oppressive rule of the authorities is challenged by the legitimate opposition, led by Resident Doctor, the focus of the first episode; the more explosive part of the resistance is led by the Rebel Queen, interviewed in the second episode; and the third episode focusses on an evening in the life of a paramedic called Hex. The soundscape and performances are flawless; I was a little uneasy about exactly why the Doctor and companions have chosen to infiltrate and overthrow this particular regime.… (mais)
½Marcado
nwhyte | Nov 14, 2008 | You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Andrew Stirling-Brown Author
Jacqueline Rayner Author
Stuart Manning Author
Gary Russell Director, Narrator
Philip Olivier Narrator
Sylvester McCoy Narrator
Sophie Aldred Narrator
Terry Molloy Narrator
Andrew Wisher Narrator
Carolyn Jones Narrator
Nicholas Briggs Narrator
Big Finish Productions Ltd Publisher
Marie-Agnes Dittrich Contributor
Heather Platt Contributor
Amanda Glauert Contributor
Ruth O. Bingham Contributor
Jane K. Brown Contributor
James Deaville Contributor
David Gramit Contributor
James L. Zychowicz Contributor
Jürgen Thym Contributor
Graham Johnson Contributor
Susan Youens Contributor
Christopher H. Gibbs Contributor
Rena Charnin Mueller Contributor
Vivienne Acheampong Narrator
Deidre Mullins Narrator
Ryan Forde Iosco Narrator
Andy Hardwick Composer
Eilidh Loan Narrator
Javone Prince Narrator
Rosie Baker Narrator
Timothy Blore Narrator
George Naylor Narrator
Raj Ghatak Narrator
Nicola Bryant Performer
Rachel Atkins Narrator
Stephen Critchlow Narrator
Lucy Robinson Narrator
Hugh Skinner Narrator
David Sibley Narrator
Scott Handcock Director
Sarah Douglas Narrator
Colin Baker Performer
Amelia Donkor Narrator
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 4
- Also by
- 2
- Membros
- 72
- Popularidade
- #243,043
- Avaliação
- 3.8
- Resenhas
- 5
- ISBNs
- 22
- Idiomas
- 2
Davros is now nearly 30, stuck in the military and angling to get into the scientific corps. A mission from the Supremo may be his ticket to glory—as long as he can survive an incursion into the Thals’ camp and a treacherous trip across the Wastelands, where unspeakable horrors dwell…
Part 2 is just as good as Part 1. I really love the sound design in this series; it totally has the vibe of Classic Who, from the interstitial music to the Dalek-sounding voices. These aren’t actual Daleks (yet) of course, but their voices sound quite similar. Plot-wise, we see more of Davros’s mother’s Lady Macbeth streak, or rather her Medea streak… There were some pretty ice-cold moments in this one and a very nice callback to Part 1. On to Part 3.… (mais)