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wshaffer

September 2021

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Judgement of the Judoon (Doctor Who)Judgement of the Judoon by Colin Brake

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This book sees the Doctor teaming up with teenage sleuth Nikki Jupiter, and a Judoon commander, as they unravel a complex web of crime centered around the Elvis the King spaceport on New Memphis. So, yes, I gather this is a bit of a stealth Doctor Who/Veronica Mars crossover. (Reminding me yet again that I really ought to bump Veronica Mars up my Netflix queue.)

The detective story plot is colorful and engaging, but what really stands out in this book is the transformation of the Judoon from the Whoniverse's most one-joke alien into individuals with distinct personalities. Well, one of them gets a distinct personality, Rok Ma, the Judoon commander, turns out to be loyal, funny, and surprisingly clever underneath his rather bureaucratic Judoon exterior. Alas, maybe because these novels are targeted at children, Colin Brake does lay on the "don't judge people (or aliens) by their exterior appearances" moral a bit more explicitly than really seems necessary, but it doesn't ultimately spoil the book.

Nick Briggs's voice talents really shine in this one - he even manages to give individual Judoon slightly distinct vocal performances, so that when Rok Ma speaks to his subordinates, you never get confused about who is talking.

I find it interesting that I seem to be enjoying the later solo 10th Doctor novels more than I enjoyed the earlier ones with Rose, Martha, and Donna. I don't know if this is just a case of authors getting more confident with the constraints of the novel range (something that seems to happen with every range of Who novels as they go on), or whether the writers actually do better when they can create a one-off companion tailor made for their specific plot rather than relying on one of the existing ones. I suppose I'll have to see how I feel when I get to the 11th Doctor novels and we're back to a television companion again.

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Date: 2010-08-10 11:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nimbusxl.livejournal.com
The main problem I had was Reggie Yates. He wasn't well suited to read a story set in the Lake district in Georgian England of the 1910s with his heavy London accent, which is why I think even Freema might have been poorly suited for it, I'd rather some supporting actor from the Human Nature 2 parter read it as it would have been more real sounding.

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