Doctor Who: Terror Of The Autons

Format: DVD

Warts & All: Colour Separation Overuse

Quote: Nonsense. What you need, Doctor, as Miss Shaw herself so often remarked, is someone to pass you your test tubes and to tell you how brilliant you are.

Review: Word to the wise: if you ever meet the Third Doctor, do not give him any grounds for suspicion or he will attempt to pull your face off. It’s a bit extreme, but if you’ve met the Autons once before you just can’t be too careful. Here, Holmes takes the same basic scenario of Spearhead (naturally) and steps up the pace and the ante with the introduction of the Master and a riotously colourful cocktail of ideas that lend this adventure a definite Avengers bouquet. It fairly rattles along with a lot of quickfire cuts and short scenes, quite an inventive array of murders or attempted killings – with shrinkage and placement in a lunchbox, ugly rubber troll dolls, inflatable comfy chairs, telephone flex (cue more Pertwee gurning opportunities) and plastic daffodils. And the carnival masks adopted by the Autons for the distribution of the deadly flowers have a surreal and eminently creepy quality.

Terror is an apt title, because you can really imagine a lot of young viewers especially carrying some of the imagery off to an early bedtime for a wealth of nightmares. The use of CSO is not as extensive as in some stories, but what makes it stand out here is the way it’s deployed for scenes that you’d think wouldn’t need it at all – a simple enough museum backdrop and an ordinary kitchen. This along with a couple of odd plot quirks – like, why on earth do alien artefacts get loaned out as museum exhibits? And a very swift and convenient change of mind on the part of the Master to facilitate the ending – qualifies as something of a glitch in an otherwise tour de force dash of classic Doctor Who. Other questions would include why UNIT consider a Morris Minor (?) a worthy military vehicle; does that telephone engineer bloke count as one of the actors to have played the Master? and oh dear, are big strong taciturn types the only role available to black actors in Doctor Who? but these are momentary wonderings before you’re generally drawn back into proceedings by the combination of the momentum, the quite vibrant palette and the variety of engaging performances.

I absolutely love Delgado’s Master, such a scintillatingly sinister gentleman, the perfect Moriarty foil to Pertwee’s Doctor, and great fun is had by the writer in having the Doctor complain of traits in his arch-enemy that he is, if anything, more guilty of himself – ‘vanity is the Master’s great weakness’, for one example. Jo, is a bit of a comedown from Liz Shaw for me, but she has her charms and – as the quote illustrates – serves a role. The UNIT team is joined by Captain Yates and it’s great to see Michael Wisher returning so soon after Ambassadors in the role of Farrell Jr.

The realisation of the Nestenes is a bit disappointing – an energy blob between two radio telescopes – compared to the mighty octopus-crab-spider beast depicted on the old Target novelisation, but hey, can’t be helped if the fx budget was blown on that CSO backdrop for Mrs Farrell’s kitchen. Generally terrific stuff, tailed off with a marvellously bizarre battle between UNIT troops and the carnival Autons, images that will not likely give you nightmares past a certain age but will nevertheless endure in the memory for all the right reasons. Plastic fantastic.

Doctor Who: Inferno

Format: DVD

Warts & All: Primords

Quote: Our liver playing us up again this morning, is it, Professor?

Review: Obviously, any portrayal of a fascistic UK that supports reckless fracking is completely far-fetched but other than that and the rather risible Primords this one makes for a cracking end to a great season. What’s striking is that, just as Ambassadors featured the first ever DW car chase, it’s taken this long for the series to explore the notion of a parallel universe.

As with most such stories, the parallels are a bit obvious – these are all the characters you know and love, but, you know, bad. Apart from drill engineer Greg Sutton, who is the same old rugged dependable male chauvinist in all universes. Despite they’re being myriad choices the events taking place in the parallel world follow the same course. There’s still an Inferno drilling project at the same location looking to break through the Earth’s crust and unlock untold energy – energy being a British priority after the Nuton power complex got shut down in The Silurians. And just as that project had its grumpy director and attendant civil servant, so does Project Inferno.

In this case, we have Olaf Pooley as Professor Stahlman, rather excellent and an utterly brilliant foil for the Doctor to go up against, until he has to go all Jekyll and Hyde on us – plus the superlative Christoper Benjamin as Sir Keith Gold, providing something of a rarity in DW – a rather affable civil servant who’s on the sensible side of the argument. Actually, I’m interested to know what his fascist version was like – he’s never seen, because he’s already met with an unfortunate accident at that point. The implication is that he was seeking to stop the project though so I can only conclude he was just as nice and sensible in the nasty world. For all its simplicity, the parallel universe does present tantalising hints of this alternative world, with Big Brother-like posters and a swastikish emblem, and the key regulars – Brigade Leader Lethbridge-Stewart and Section Leader Elisabeth Shaw are terrific, Nick Courtney very clearly enjoying himself behind that eyepatch. Quite difficult to buy an evil Benton, but there you go, can’t have everything.

Ultimately, the parallel universe serves its role admirably – which is to show us the disastrous consequences of the drilling project, to deliver dramatic cost ahead of the Doctor’s efforts to avert the catastrophe. Without it all we would have as an audience would be dire warnings and just as with fracking protest groups nobody pays much attention to them. Seeing the end of the world – familiar characters set to go out in a very inglorious blaze – well, that’s one way to get us all to sit up and take notice. There’s a good deal of action and drama and an especially effective cliffhanger, with countdown and clever cuts as Evil Stahlman (actually not unlike Good Stahlman, but with beady dark glasses) trains a gun on the Doctor and the drillhead is about to blow. And it all ends with a lovely shot of Liz chuckling to herself, with no suggestion that we are never going to see her again. So it’s a parting shot that makes me sad at the same time. And always leaves me wanting to either print the screen and frame it or write a proper Liz farewell story. I know I’ll do one or the other one of these days.

Anyway, I digress. Overall, I think this makes for a rip-roaring adventure yarn. It’s just a shame about those monsters.

Doctor Who: Ambassadors Of Death

Format: DVD

Warts & All: You Only Die Twice. Maybe Thrice.

Quote: “It’s all right. I won’t hurt you.”

Review: Wow, it’s kind of odd singing the praises right now of anything that ends with someone who has fought for a given outcome then simply walks away, but this remains one of my all-time favourite DW stories. And that’s in spite of a host of imperfections and – on this occasion – having some stretch of the rewatch spoiled by a mood so thoroughly depressed by real world events going on around me. It takes a lot to ruin a good old bit of classic Doctor Who for me, but conversely it takes a heck of a lot to shake me from my convictions when it’s a story I’ve loved for so long. Ambassadors is, in a sense, a bit before my time, but it does contain my earliest ever DW memory – that of haunting space-suited figures marching along in slow-motion. As a result, my affection for this is pretty deep-seated, although I am fully aware of its faults. What lets it down most in the visual stakes is some hammy fight sequences and (certainly when watched at an episode a day) being able to spot the same guys die more than once. Oops.

Ah well, as with Silurians, it defies the format imposed upon it somewhat, managing to come up with an interesting variation on alien invasion – the aliens are peaceful, but are exploited by a misguided and vengeful general hoping to turn the world against them. John Abinieri is great as General Carrington, lending great sympathy (“It’s my moral duty.”) to a role that always puts me in mind of General Williams in Malcolm Hulke’s later Frontier In Space.

There are a number of other guest roles that invest this one a lot of appeal: Cyril Shaps (last seen in Tomb Of The Cybermen) as a professor Liz Shaw recognises from her Cambridge days, Ronald Allen (of Crossroads!) as Ralph Cornish and the mighty Michael Wisher provides some soft-spoken David Attenborough style commentary as the news reporter on site. Some aspects of the adventure make no sense – for example, the baddies build devices to communicate with and control the alien Ambassadors, but they’re shown to only transmit simple instructions and yet they manage to pull off robberies and the like using them. It’s like trying to control sentient beings with an early programming language like LOGO. And one of the mercenaries is busted out of prison, as though he’s a key member of Carrington’s force – and he has a presence about him to suggest he’s a major player among the bad guys – but he’s never seen again, replaced it seems by the character of Reegan. Who is almost but not quite on a par with Scorby in the Seeds Of Doom: ie. a nasty piece of work who you actually almost but not quite like.

There are contrivances and convolutions to draw out the adventure to a full seven episodes, with multiple inventive attempts on the Doctor’s life and at times the pace lags, but the action sequences give it a bit of a small screen blockbuster feel and the unique cliffhanger reprise within a title sequence break injects an added sting of drama and excitement into proceedings.

The mystery surrounding the missing astronauts and the faceless visors of the figures striding around in their spacesuits really sells the menace and personally I would have preferred never to have seen what the aliens looked like under those helmets. Pertwee is fab as is Courtney’s Brigadier, but for me Liz steals the show somewhat in her scenes – even involving herself in a slice of the action, with the help of a stuntman. The quote above is from her, when she is grabbed by one of the thugs holding her prisoner and it’s an absolute gem of a moment. What firmly cements this as something special though is that ending. It’s beautifully understated – and brave. Not least because the Doctor is handing over actual peace negotiations to humans who, quite recently, blew up some caves housing another alien race. Quatermass meets Bond meets The Avengers.

Quite the cocktail and somewhat messily shaken and stirred, but downed one glass at a time it hits the spot.

Doctor Who: And The Silurians

Format: DVD

Warts & All: Big Rubber Dinosaur

Quote: That’s typical of the military mind, isn’t it? Present them with a new problem and they start shooting at it.

Review: What a beautifully constructed sci-fi morality tale. Finally, an alien race who have a valid claim on the Earth, because they’re not aliens and are the world’s original owners. Humans are the squatters, although it’s not their fault they evolved. Well, some of them anyway. Peaceful co-existence with the Silurians would be disaster, of course. You’d have millions of lizards coming up from underground, stealing all our jobs and the planet’s overcrowded as it is. But you can’t blame the Doctor for trying. Belligerence, primitive fears and narrow-minded bigotry plagues both sides and the reasoned voices are few.

The many arguments pit military against science, friends against each other, everybody against bureaucracy and science against biological warfare. And the story understands the reality: most such situations end hopelessly. It’s more than the Doctor’s bitter disappointment we feel on that closing note.

It’s all wonderfully played with a cast that includes Paul Darrow as a UNIT Captain, Fulton Mackay as Dr Quinn, not the medicine woman but rather a duplicitous scientist who wants to exploit the Silurians for the knowledge they can give him, and Peter (Nyder) Miles as Dr Lawrence, the officious and overwrought director of the research facility. The sniping between him and the UNIT contingent, especially the Doctor, is better than any shooting war. And he even has a curious moment of butting heads against a minor employee who seems particularly possessive over his phone. Magic. Then Geoffrey Palmer shows up as Masters, government secretary, permanent or otherwise. Bonus! His character is one of the more reasonable government officials we get to see in the Pertwee era. Amusing when he decides his course of action will be to wait on further reports and ultimately tragic when he goes on to be the carrier of an engineered plague, delivering one of the most horrific and terrifying scenarios in all Doctor Who, to my mind.

It’s Survivors territory, is what it is and gives a chilling sense of very real people keeling over and dying in the streets of London. The tension in the lab as the Doctor and Liz battle to fight a cure is easily a match for the guns and grenades action that the UNIT era is more famous for. Pertwee and Caroline John are an absolute delight here and Courtney blazes as the Brigadier. And even though ultimately he is the one who bombs the shit out of the Silurians we understand why. Everyone’s views and motives are clear and we get them, irrespective of whether we agree with them or condone their actions.

The dinosaur looks rubbish, but DW has never had a great track record with larger monsters and this is not a story about monsters. This is all about the promise and potential and the frequent shortfall and capacity for horrors/atrocities within ourselves.

Absolutely bloody brilliant.

Doctor Who: Spearhead From Space

Format: DVD

Warts & All: Rubber Tentacle Wrestling!

Quote: Shoes!

Review: After a short break, Doctor Who returns – in colour! It’s funny now we take such things for granted and I know our family wouldn’t have noticed the change since we only had a B&W telly in our house for years. Still, it was something to experience the shift in the context of my Who rewatchathon and beyond the addition of colour it’s a different show.

It feels like an Avengers episode, with plastic mannequins in overalls prowling the woods in search of pink plastic glow globes and strange shiny faced people up to no good at a plastics factory. Pertwee makes his mark as the new Doctor, even though – or maybe because – he’s supposed to be all out of sorts and disoriented post-regeneration. It creates some nice comic touches to bridge the transformation from Troughton. There’s no Steed and Mrs Peel vibe but Caroline John as Liz Shaw is an instant hit (with me anyway) and she’s shown cracking on with the science bit while the Doctor’s still searching for his shoes and his lost marbles. And when they do meet they get to share a few nice moments as (near) intellectual equals, creating an enjoyable science club dynamic with the Brigadier on the sidelines.

In some respects it’s a fairly run of the mill invasion story, the battle with Autons at the factory almost a reenactment of one with the Cybermen in Invasion, but the plastics element and the nature of the Nestenes lend it a distinctive quirkiness about it. With it all condensed into four parts it also feels like there’s a lot going on. There are oddities: the Autons’ motives for attempted kidnap of the Doctor are tenuous and who the hell would want to go see an exhibit of civil servants at Madame Tussauds? But it’s all delivered with flair and panache and it’s not shy about dishing out the scares and genuine horror along with the action. Besides the obvious hall of fame shop window mannequin rampage, Hugh Burden is memorably creepy as Channing, ably assisted by Who semi-regular John Woodnutt, and it’s even a pleasant surprise to spot dependable Prentis Hancock as a reporter.

The standard Autons are a formidable and unstoppable enemy, I do hope they’ll return. All in all, this is a new era setting out its stall right out of the gate, establishing UNIT’s credentials and promoting the Brigadier to key series regular. And much as it seems a shame to have the Doctor stranded on one planet in one time, instead of being able to freely travel anywhere between Cardiff and London, this remains my favourite new Doctor intro story.

Doctor Who: The Invasion

Format: DVD (w/ animation)

Warts & All: Cyberdummy!

Quote: Honestly, Jamie. Cybermen underneath London and all you can think about is your sleep.

Review: At eight episodes long, you’d expect to feel like Jamie and think about getting some kip, but The Invasion hooks you in and keeps your attention very well for such a lengthy story. Gripping, suspenseful, all the intrigue and action of a technothriller, a masterful villain from Kevin Stoney as Tobias Vaughan (backed up by an excellent turn from Peter Halliday as Vaughan’s sadistic whimpering chief guard dog). And while the Cybermen don’t really make an entrance until quite late it’s one hell of an entrance. The moment of the titular Invasion is one of those all-time great sequences of imagery in Doctor Who, guaranteed to give chills. And earlier on, the scenes in the sewers are very creepy, with the Cybe plagued by fear, courtesy of the brilliantly named device, the Cerebreton Mentor, is something especially unnerving.

Lethbridge-Stewart is the Brigadier at last, as we know and love the chap, and he heads up a full UNIT task force, complete with operational HQ aboard a C130 Hercules. They strike as a really together, organised and efficient sort of outfit and this story has a great deal of nostalgic appeal even to those of us for whom it’s technically before our time. Even good old Sergeant Benton is on hand, knocking over cups at times of heightened tension. Really liked Sally Faulkner as Isobel Watkins, and if we didn’t already have such a superlative companion in Zoe I could’ve seen her hopping aboard the TARDIS at the end, maybe photographing everything in sight. As it is, there’s a lovely moment post Cyber-battle where she takes shots of the Doctor and Troughton (on tip top form here) makes great play on slowly warming to having his picture taken. Jamie is out of action for a couple of episodes, shot in the back by the bad guys, but for the most part he has plenty to do. Although he does get drawn into adopting the same sexist attitudes demonstrated by the UNIT soldiers, but gets told off for it. Rightly so.

The animated episodes by Cosgrove Hall are pretty good, and if only this tale featured Cybermats I could have shouted Dangermat! at the screen. There’s an overuse of the same stock footage, on a loop, for the missile strikes at the end, the sliding door concealing Cybercontrol in Vaughan’s office is occasionally a bit wonky. And a bold attempt at a shot of a Cyberman toppling off a building looks dead dodgy but all of these are budgetary issues and far be it from me to pick on a few trifling Cyberflaws in what is probably the best Cyberstory of the era. Or any other, come to that. Nuff said

Doctor Who: The Web Of Fear

Format: DVD (w/ Episode 3 Recon)

Warts & All: Wooden Tunnels

Quote: Television? Never watch it. You an actor or something?

Review: Jon Pertwee was right about the Yeti in Tooting Bec and it’s great to see them tramping and roaring their way around the London Underground. It’s a brilliant setting, dark and claustrophobic, and – since London Transport wouldn’t give permission to film – fantastically realised by the production designer. All that’s missing is the work of a Foley artist to cover the clunky wooden footsteps that, just occasionally, intrude on the authenticity a bit. This is another base under siege story, with monsters plus a dirty great web closing the net on the last bastion of defence in a battle to save London. But there’s a deal more mobility than in other besieged bases as we get plenty of explorations and expeditions through the tunnels, making full use of the shadowy atmosphere and general creepiness. And there’s an excursion up to the surface that, with a touch of colour, could easily have been lifted from the Pertwee/UNIT years had they been a thing yet. Of course, this is the story that makes them a glint in the producers’ eyes.

 

Here, we’re introduced to Colonel Lethbridge-Stewart. (Albeit, as with Pat Troughton we’re missing his actual debut episode – thanks, BBC. Grr.) Obviously, I’m already familiar with the character but Nick Courtney gives him such great personality he must have surely made an outstanding first impression on viewers at the time. Captain Knight, by comparison, is a bland unknown soldier. He does all right, but Lethbridge-Stewart is clearly somebody. And it’s great how the suspicions over who is the traitor are cast around to include this chap that, with 20/20 hindsight, we know is one of the good guys. Staff Sergeant Arnold and the cowardly skiving Evans are the other stars among the military. Harold Chorley is a bit of a spineless sleezeball reporter and it’s interesting that he’s from London Television and not the BBC, as though BBC correspondents could never be shown in such a light. Anyway, he runs off and disappears for most of the story when I expected him to be a bit more significant – although his absence is intended to throw suspicion his way. Since I enjoyed the Abominable Snowmen on audio, it was good to see Jack Watling as Travers and Tina Packer is excellent as his daughter, Anne, who is pretty much a precursor to the Scientific Advisor post that opens up at UNIT. (The role that the lovely Liz Shaw takes up, to become Assistant To The Scientific Adviser, the Doctor.) She does get to do a bit of screaming and what not, but her strength of will is nicely played and a welcome contrast to poor, feeble Victoria who, aside from showing some pluck in venturing alone into the tunnels at one point, basically whimpers her way through the adventure.

 

Headstrong Jamie is right at home with the soldiers as regards taking action, not so much obeying orders, good for him. Troughton continues to be fabulous and it’s especially fun to see the Doctor get all childish and miffed at the end that his friends save him but spoil his plans to deal with the Great Intelligence once and for all. The Intelligence voice isn’t as chilling and pervasive as in the Det Sen Monastery – it only makes an ‘appearance’ towards the end – but it’s kind of a nice idea to have it talking out of the Picadilly Circus tannoy.

 

I think the story wastes a bit of time early on with the TARDIS suspended in the web in space, but when it cracks on it’s right on track. Nicely paced, with action and tension, a good selection of dramatic turns and great monsters in a tremendous setting, this is the stuff of classic Doctor Who. Highly enjoyable

The Lethbridge-Stewart QUIZ Book – Pre-order now!

Candy Jar Books is pleased to announce The Lethbridge-Stewart Quiz Book. Compiled by Mark Jones, the book collects together trivia from fifty years of the Brigadier’s on-screen life.

The book also includes questions from the Target novels, Big Finish and BBC audio stories, comic strips and the Candy Jar Lethbridge-Stewart novels.

Mark Jones, author of the recent Lethbridge-Stewart free story United in Blood, says: “When Candy Jar asked me to compile The Lethbridge-Stewart Quiz Book I couldn’t wait to get started. The Brigadier is a character that meant a great deal to me and it gave me the chance to watch the UNIT stories over again.”

Like the classic Doctor Who Quiz Books of the 1980s, The Lethbridge-Stewart Quiz Book features over 750 questions on the UNIT era of Doctor Who and beyond. For instance:

  • In the television story The Time Monster what was TOMTIT?
  • Who is attempting to penetrate the Earth’s crust in Inferno?
  • What relation is James Lethbridge-Stewart to the Brigadier?
  • What does UNIT stand for?

Shaun Russell, head of publishing at Candy Jar, is excited about the book. “I remember a trip to Lyme Regis as a boy where I found a copy of the first Doctor Who Quiz Book. For some reason my local WHSmith did not have this book so this made the discovery even more exciting. I don’t think my sister appreciated it though. Asking me questions about Doctor Who was not her idea of fun.”

Mark is revisiting this classic formula, with twelve separate sections dedicated to the adventures of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. He says: “Hopefully, there’s something for everyone and it’s a book that will provide hours of entertainment and a challenge to the old grey matter. It’s a book for dipping into whenever you feel like challenging yourself or your friends – hopefully without too many arguments.”

The Lethbridge-Stewart Quiz Book is currently only available from the Candy Jar website, for £8.99 (+ p&p). All pre-orders will receive a free PDF copy The HAVOC Files 1.

Night of the Intelligence is also released soon and can be ordered individually or as part of the discounted UK bundle (which includes the novels The Daughters of Earth by Sarah Groenewegen, The Dreamer’s Lament by Benjamin Burford-Jones) for only £26.25 (including postage), saving £9.72, or an international bundle for only £45.00 (including postage), saving £5.97. Or, you can buy it as part of our yearly subscription offer. Order early to avoid disappointment.

Candy Jar still has twenty copies of the novella bundles left. The Life of Evans has been posted out, but you can still pre-order The Flaming Soldier and Day of the Intelligence. Order now to avoid disappointment. Only available directly from Candy Jar Books at: http://www.candy-jar.co.uk/books/thelifeofevans.html

http://www.candy-jar.co.uk/books/thelethbridgestewartquizbook.html

Series Four Launches Anniversary Year + FREE STORY!

Candy Jar Books is pleased to announce the second free Lethbridge-Stewart short story of 2017.

Hot on the heels of last month’s United in Blood, comes a brand new story from Nick Walters, The Runway Bomb!

Nick Walters is no stranger to the worlds of Doctor Who, having written for BBC Books in the 1990s, and penning two spin-off novels, one for the Bernice Summerfield series, and one for Lethbridge-Stewart back in 2015.

It was a hanging thread from Nick’s Lethbridge-Stewart novel that inspired The Runaway Bomb, as Range Editor Andy Frankham-Allen explains: “At the end of Mutually Assured Domination, Lethbridge-Stewart considered two soldiers for the Fifth – both helped him fight the Dominators in that book – but we’ve not heard from them since. So, this short story shows us a little of how Lethbridge-Stewart recruits new troops for the Corps. Only one of the two will make the grade, and the winner has a guest spot in Night of the Intelligence, the novel for which this short story is the companion.”

Nick says: “Sergeant Bell and (especially) Corporal Stevens originally had bigger roles in Mutually Assured Domination, so I leapt at the chance of fleshing out the characters a bit more. Stevens is a bit of a loose cannon and quite an intimidating character, whilst Bell is quieter and more reserved, so the two make a good pairing. I wanted to put them in a combat situation to see what happens. Bell, especially, went through the wringer in Mutually Assured Domination, so this story, if you like, is his ‘reward’ for all that he suffered – being tied to that chair for hours on end couldn’t have been nice!  As for the titular Bomb of the story, it is based on a fondly-remembered episode of The Six Million Dollar Man entitled Death Probe, which really captured my six-year-old imagination. Older readers (?) may remember this!”

The Runaway Bomb will be sent out free to everybody who purchases (includes any bundles or subscription featuring…) this month’s release, Night of the Intelligence by Andy Frankham-Allen.

Night of the Intelligence not only opens seires four of the range, but also begins the year-long celebration of the Great Intelligence and Professor Travers, characters who first appeared in Doctor Who on September 30 1967 in The Abominable Snowmen by Mervyn Haisman & Henry Lincoln. The celebration continues with a special anniverary bundle – all of which act as prequels to Night of the Intelligence. Buy Candy Jar’s three Great Intelligence novels (The Forgotten Son by Andy Frankham-Allen, Times Squared by Rick Cross, and Night of the Intelligence) and get The Schizoid Earth by David A McIntee for free. So that’s four books for the price of three!

Hannah Haisman, Executor of the Haisman Estate, says: “It’s been wonderful seeing the resurgence of respect for my grandfather’s creations in the last few years, and celebrating two of his greatest characters is a moment of pride for me. Grandad would adore what’s happening now, and especially the way Andy (Frankham-Allen) has tied his characters’ histories together. It’s a wonderful time to be a fan of the Great Intelligence and Professor Travers!”

Throughout 2017 a further three non-Lethbridge-Stewart titles featuring the Great Intelligence will be released. Shaun Russell, head of publishing, says: “We’re very proud to work alongside some great people during the celebration year, and look forward to sharing further titles and information with you as the year goes on. Great things are coming!”

The foreword is written by United in Blood’s Mark Jones. Mark Jones was co-creator of the Jon Pertwee and Patrick Troughton TV project Starwatch.

Night of the Intelligence is available for pre-order now, for £8.99 (+ p&p). You can pre-order it individually or as part of the discounted UK bundle for only £26.25 (including postage), saving £9.72, or an international bundle for only £37.00 (excluding postage), saving £5.97.

The Anniversary Intelligence bundle can be ordered now, for £26.25 (including postage), saving £21.71, or an international bundle for only £47.00 (excluding postage), saving £12.96.

Series Four – Pre-Order Books One and Two

Candy Jar Books is pleased to announce the second book in the fourth series of Lethbridge-Stewart novels, following on from May’s Night of the Intelligence.

The Daughters of Earth, due out late June, sees Lethbridge-Stewart’s fiancee, Sally, take a more central role in the story, in what will prove to be something of a game-changer for the series as a whole.

Sarah Groenewegen wrote the well-received Lethbridge-Stewart short story, The Lock-In in 2016, and this is her first novel. She previously wrote for the Doctor Who Short Trips collections, with stories like Virgin Lands, Hymn of the City and The Bushranger’s Story, is excited to be involved in  such a pivotal moment in the Lethbridge-Stewart series.

She says: “I wanted to explore the reasons for why she signed up, her ideals of duty in the face of the adventures they all share. Her relationship with the Brigadier, especially now they work together. Then there’s her interest in a newly emerging women’s lib movement arguing for peaceful solutions to mankind’s many problems – the Daughters of Earth.”

Range Editor Andy Frankham-Allen says: “The relationship between Lethbridge-Stewart and Sally has been simmering away in the background of the series since the beginning, eleven novels in total. The Daughters of Earth has been set up very deliberately to put Sally in a position that makes her look at her position in the Corps in a very different way.”

Sarah – who was born in Sydney but now lives in London – feels that despite The Daughters of Earth being set in the early 1970s, the subject matter is still quite relevant and reflects what’s happening in the divisive politics of today.

She continues: “I had terrific fun creating a late-’60s peace movement led and run solely by women. While their politics are very much rooted in the start of women’s lib – the generation before the women of Greenham Common, and the grand-generation of the women now running the resistance against current right-wing authoritarianism – there are echoes of what’s happening now and how women organise. The intersections of class, race, outsiders versus those within the establishment – how prone they are to infiltration. I wrote the book during the US presidential elections, which kept being a touchstone to how far women have come to be treated as human beings with agency and a reminder as to how quickly reactionary politics can assert itself.”

The book includes a foreword by popular Doctor Who and Star Trek scribe, Una McCormack. She says: “Representation matters. Sarah knows this, but, more importantly, she lives this. In her professional life, her commitment to equality and diversity has earned her recognition from her peers, and a ‘gong’ (a BEM, no less – yes, Sydney Newman would be horrified). In her writing, fiction and non-fiction, and her involvement with fandom, she has voiced and made visible lives and experiences that are too often ignored or denied: women who game, dykes who dig Time Lords. Doctor Who (let’s face it) hasn’t always been great at representation (where is our female Doctor?).”

The cover has designed by Lethbridge-Stewart regular artist Adrian Salmon. Adrian says: “My initial idea was to confine all the various visual ideas within the overall shape of the Daughters of Earth’ house. However after submitting my rough it was brought to my attention that the ‘house style’ for the Lethbridge-Stewart main range is a circular motif, which I had inadvertently created with my cover for Mutually Assured Domination in 2015. How ironic! I dropped the house shape into a circle allowing parts to break out for visual punch.”

Sarah is really pleased with the cover and feels it beautifully illustrates her initial idea. She says: “I love the cover that Adrian Salmon has painted for my book. So striking and bold, but yet it gets the central conflict for Sally: has she chosen her military career wisely? Or is there another path?”

Blurb:

To celebrate Lethbridge-Stewart’s birthday, a romantic weekend is planned for him and Sally Wright in a remote cottage in the Scottish Highlands. Unfortunately for Sally, freak weather causes her to crash her car.

Lethbridge-Stewart, meanwhile, is in Cairngorm investigating UFO sightings with Anne Travers and Lieutenant Bishop. Elsewhere, the Daughters of Earth, a women-only peace movement, are making waves in the political world.

But just who is their enigmatic leader? And what links the Daughters with the events of Cairngorm and Sally’s accident?

The Daughters of Earth is available for pre-order now, for £8.99 (+ p&p). You can pre-order it individually or as part of the discounted UK bundle (which includes the novels Night of the Intelligence by Andy Frankham-Allen, and The Dreamer’s Lament by Benjamin Buford-Jones) for only £26.25 (including postage), saving £9.72, or an international bundle for only £45.00 (including postage), saving £5.97. Or, you can buy it as part of our yearly subscription offer. Order early to avoid disappointment.

Candy Jar still has thirty copies of the novella bundles left. The Life of Evans has been posted out, but you can still pre-order The Flaming Soldier and Day of the Intelligence. Order now to avoid disappointment. Only available directly from Candy Jar Books at: http://www.candy-jar.co.uk/books/thelifeofevans.html

http://www.candy-jar.co.uk/books/thedaughtersofearth.html