Virgin New Adventures – No Future

Written by Paul Cornell.

Virgin New Adventure book 23.

Spoiler-free verdict: A frothy evolution of Virgin’s vision of Doctor Who into principles of feminist fandom and political activism, and a fun and emotional story to boot, if a little mispaced in the plot.

Recommended pre-reading: Love and War, Deceit, Blood Heat, The Left-Handed Hummingbird, Conundrum.

***

For a series that birthed itself with two major plot arcs, Timewyrm and Cat’s Cradle, the Virgin books have grown light on long-form storytelling. The Alternate History Cycle, beginning with Blood Heat, has been something of a much-needed shakeup, and on the whole, No Future is an utterly wonderful bit of closure.

For those just joining in, the last few books have revolved around a figure messing with the timelines, creating alternate realities which the Seventh Doctor, Bernice Summerfield, and Ace are forced to clean up after. This has been used to draw out several new conflicts in the team, some more organic than others. On the more forced end of things, Ace and Benny have increasingly gone at each other’s throats, something which has provided many frustrating moments, and continues to here, but also some real triumphs, including many of my favorite moments of the previous book, Conundrum. Mostly, this serves Ace as a character; “New Ace” has been a famously prickly prospect for both writers and readers, and so by putting her into conflict with Bernice, these issues can be externalised and resolved through repairing her relationships. Meanwhile, both companions are put into a place of questioning the Doctor, mostly built on his destruction of the alternate universe from Blood Heat, which over the course of the arc serves as a sort of exorcism of the inadequately addressed destruction of a solar system at the climax to The Pit.

If this sounds like a lot of clean-up work, that’s because it mostly is. No Future takes on these conflicts in order to establish a sort of clean playing field for the series going forward. On the whole, it succeeds at this very well. Ace’s surrogate companion relationship with the Meddling Monk (unsurprisingly, the Time Lord responsible for mucking with history), while a ruse to play both him and the Doctor, serves to highlight her needs as a time-traveller. And both she and Benny get to have a go at experiencing what it’s like to be the Doctor through the brilliant choice of faking his death; Ace gets to pull the strings in arranging these machinations, and while thinking he’s dead, Benny gets to briefly serve as the frothy adventurer the Doctor once was and illustrate a different kind of hero. The Doctor gets a little bit less, having been thoroughly interrogated by Kate Orman’s The Left-Handed Hummingbird, but there’s some wonderful payoff for both him and Ace in regards to that book’s themes, of whether the Warrior can become the Healer. The answers are complicated but meaningful, and it’s no wonder that provides a thematic basis for numerous new series episodes.

That isn’t to say all the character is successful. Though Ace gets much-needed and quite beautiful development, particularly in the first and last thirds of the book, in the lengthy middle section, the nature of the plate-spinning plot means that her motivations are murky, and thus her emotional interiority largely disappears. This isn’t a total wash, as there’s some gorgeous scenes between her and Benny’s anarchist bandmate Danny Pain allowing her to vent away from the Doctor and Benny. The plot shares these issues. Major reveals like Artemis the Chronovore or the Brigadier’s true allegiances are held back far longer than needed, resulting in a deneument to the book that grinds to a halt for the Doctor to explain everything for a few pages.

In a lesser book, pacing issues like this would be fatal, and they have been to several past New Adventures. But Paul Cornell is too talented to leave this slack middle space empty. This book is awash with meaningful ideas and aesthetics to keep things moving in meaningful ways. For a start, it continues the engagements with metafiction from Conundrum to comment on Doctor Who, both with the hilariously rubbish Vardans manipulating media space and with the Monk using Artemis to edit Doctor Who stories to get his victory. The opening chapter is a particular triumph in this regard, the Monk watching a fairly stereotypical action adventure result in the brutal death of Ace.

Metafiction for metafiction’s sake is fun, as Conundrum illustrated. But No Future’s engagement with punk and politics takes it a step further, utilizing metafiction to make a political statement on what Doctor Who can be. Some of this happens in small ways, such as Ace complimenting Danny’s “this machine kills fascists” line, or Ace shooting the Queen, or… well, anything with Ace, really, who returns to her “bring down the government” Cartmel roots. Benny joining an anarchist punk band similarly delights, as does Captain Mike Yates’ ascension into anarchy and studded leather. There’s also a delightful acknowledgement of Who fan culture in general, with the Doctor becoming a hero of rumor in fanzines. But some of it cuts deeper and rawer, particularly the more queer and feminist sections. Ace’s story comes down to a sapphically-tinged relationship with the beautiful Artemis, who she frees from being chained to a bed (and who Vardan Pike eagerly ships with Ace), a dynamic which allows her to take total control of the narrative and heal her broken heart.

But for me, the best moment of all is in a little anecdote from Danny about errors made romancing a rape victim. It’s awkward and uncomfortable, a case of a man pushing too hard and hurting someone vulnerable out of not knowing when to shut up and respect boundaries. Ordinarily, telling this story from the perspective of the man approaching the victim is a horrible choice. But the sheer tenderness, the focus on the victim’s needs, and the way failing to help someone in need makes Danny feel like a monster results in something that took my breath away, a gorgeous little moment of humanity. It’s feminist, but it’s feminism from the perspective of the way people can unknowingly perpetuate toxic masculinity, a perspective Who damn well needs, given how long it’s been a man-dominated world (and in many ways continues to be). Moments like this push No Future into something forward-looking and vital, exactly what’s needed after the first ever woman-written Who novel in The Left-Handed Hummingbird.

And that’s the real triumph of No Future: the way it repairs and looks forward. As befits the seasonal theming of summer, this book is about brushing away the wounds and the cold and embracing a frothier, frockier, more feminist future for Doctor Who. It feels like a long time since one of these books ended with the Doctor and friends, heading off on another great adventure, but for once, in the shining light of summer, that’s exactly what’s needed. It’s a step forward into a bright future.

9/10

Short Trips – The Astrea Conspiracy

Written by Lizbeth Myles and directed by Nicholas Briggs.

Spoiler-free verdict: A detailed historical elevated by exceptional characterization a fresh voice.

Recommended pre-listening: None.

***

Big Finish built so much of their reputation on redefining eras long gone. As a result, it’s always interesting to see them do the opposite, to take the open door from the current show and immediately walk through it. The Astrea Conspiracy is the swiftest Big Finish have ever gone from a Doctor departing the show to that same Doctor appearing on audio. And as a result, the final production feels a lot more immediate.

It’s not that this is a particularly world-changing story in of its contents. There are a number of historical dramas the Doctor has been dropped into from as far back as the 60s. But there is nonetheless a vivid life to this story that makes it engrossing. A significant part of that is the characterization. Neve McIntosh puts in a marvelous Capaldi imitation, but more than that, Lizbeth Myles writes a genuinely marvelous Twelfth Doctor. He’s impish and silly, and merges an alien detachment with a deep sense of care. For anyone already missing his Doctor, and I’m sure I’m not alone in that, this story perfectly captures what’s so wonderful about him.

In terms of values, it also feels like a true extension of the era into new directions. Steven Moffat’s later years with the Twelfth Doctor were accompanied by bigger and bigger steps into overt feminism for the show, both in front of and behind the camera; this is an era which not only advanced the possibility of a woman as the Doctor with characters like Clara and Missy, but has tied itself for most women to ever write a run of Doctor Who, and whose defining director is none other than Rachel Talalay. Myles fits into that tradition nicely. It’s not just that she’s a woman in a Big Finish landscape overwhelmingly defined by men, but it’s that she comes from a distinctly feminist critical tradition of fandom, one which makes itself felt in the story. This also accounts for the fantastic choice of building the story around Aphra Behn. I have to confess, she is not a historical figure I’d heard of before, but from what a cursory Google search has told me, she has been undergoing feminist re-evaluation for several decades now. She’s exactly the sort of perspective that feminist scholarly fandom can offer, and the story’s successes prove that that is a worthwhile exercise.

It’s also bolstered by the fact that, while the story is true to the Twelfth Doctor’s era, it’s nothing like what this Doctor had on TV. It’s one of those “pure historicals”, in which the Doctor himself is the sole source of sci-fi drama. This helpfully avoids the sense of repition and empty nostalgia recreation, which it’s far too soon after Capaldi’s era to be entirely in need of. If anything, it’s more in-tune with what Capaldi’s run on Doctor Who has been followed by, under Chris Chibnall, sharing an approach to history to the lightly sci-fi-flavored Rosa and Demons of the Punjab, modern stories which have revitalized the genre and served as highlights of Jodie Whittaker’s era. Thus, seeing the Twelfth Doctor in such a story feels less like a throwback and more like a leap forward into new territory—the new territory he helped pave the way for.

The Astrea Conspiracy isn’t perfect. At times, I found myself lost in the historical details as someone who hasn’t researched the period, and the actual plot is fairly slender, mostly coming down to the old Who standby of capture and escape. But the way it is breathed into life with sharp detail makes it feel like so much more. This is a simple tale told well, sparkling in the small moments, the research, and the wit. It’s definitely worth $2.99 and forty minutes of your time.

8/10