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Unnatural History (Doctor Who Series) [Mass Market Paperback]

Kate Orman (Author), Jonathan Blum (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Doctor Who Series June 1999
The Doctor regenerated in San Francisco at the turn of the millennium. When he returns there a few years later, it seems the catastrophic events that nearly sent the whole of Earth into cosmic oblivion have taken their toll. San Francisco was the anchor point, and a breach between dimensions has sprung up. All sorts of weird and wonderful creatures have turned up -- griffins, unicorns -- and things more sinister.

The Doctor's companion Sam is exposed and becomes a changed person -- literally. Her hair is dark, she has never met the Doctor in her life. With Fitz, he is able to convince her to help them put things right -- to sacrifice herself so that the old Sam may return. For stalking the turbulent streets is the sinister Unnaturalist -- a collector of genetic curios whose private collection will be much enriched by the Time Travelers.



Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 279 pages
  • Publisher: BBC Pubns (June 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0563555769
  • ISBN-13: 978-0563555766
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.4 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,523,042 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars There's a lot going on here, July 13, 2001
This review is from: Unnatural History (Doctor Who Series) (Mass Market Paperback)
There are a lot of things going on in UNNATURAL HISTORY. The good news is that the great majority are wonderfully intriguing, appealing and well written. The bad news is that because there are so many, they come across at times as being superficial and not fully developed. This is indeed very frustrating although the overall effect isn't enough to take away from the book as a whole.

First of all, we finally get to meet the oft-hinted-at Dark Sam. While the regular (blonde) Sam Jones is a squeaky clean (and at times dead boring) defender of causes, the Dark Sam is an altered version who has had thoughts and experiences that the original would never have dreamed of. Unfortunately, not much of this seems to affect her, and the Dark Sam is soon blindly trusting the Doctor and being innocuous in exactly the same way that she would have normally. She smokes, drinks and has done drugs in the past, but her character isn't significantly different - she still speaks and acts in the same manner. I had to keep reminding myself that this was supposed to be a changed person.

Now I realize that one of the themes of the book is that the past is not as important to the present and the future as the present itself is. I get the impression that Dark Sam was deliberately made inoffensive to re-enforce this philosophy; Dark Sam can have a different and more dangerous, gritty past than Blonde Sam, yet she still is, at her core, the same person. This may indeed be an interesting train of argument (and it definitely works well in the confines of this story) but extending the theme into the Dark Sam subplot didn't seem to work as well. In fact, it took me almost the first hundred pages or so to figure out what they were doing with her. And coincidentally it was around the point at which I realized this that they started bringing some of the darker aspects into the foreground. Although this did begin to distinguish her from the Blonde Sam it didn't seem to quite do enough, though I realize that this was probably the point.

That said, I thought the rest of the story was quite enjoyable. There are some wonderfully written sequences that are a joy to read. The "Wild Hunt" effect when Sam's mind would react to her past being re-written was executed tremendous well. This section highlighted the things that I enjoy the most in Ormanblum books; it's slightly surreal, it's full of wonderful imagery and it's true to the character going through the experience. I thought that there was only a single piece of wasted potential and that was that we only saw the occurrence through Sam's eyes. Since it was a slightly hallucinogenic experience I would have been interested to see Fitz and the Doctor's reaction to going through the same phenomenon and how it compared to Sam's. But this is only a minor quibble and did not detract from my enjoyment of the sequences.

Unlike some of their previous books, there are not very many secondary characters in the story. Instead it focuses on the three regulars (well, two regulars and one altered) and gives more attention over to the plot. The only downside to this is that there seems to be too much going on to fully justify the inclusion of everything

Despite some imperfections this is a story worth reading and is the best book in the Doctor Who range since THE FACE-EATER.

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Summer Of Love 2002 - Kate and Jon Do It Again!, October 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Unnatural History (Doctor Who Series) (Mass Market Paperback)
It's Haight-Ashbury all over, with a dark haired alternate Biodata version of Sam Jones who embraces the drug culture and degerates into the poster child for free love! Fitz, attempting as always to "fit in", dons Lennon granny glasses and a yin yang t-shirt. Underneath it all lies a twisted thread of anarchy with PRISONER-esque tones of downing the beaurocracy. The Doctor tells Sam about his trips dropping acid in 1968 and mentions him taking the snake poison in SNAKEDANCE to which she quips "ooh, riding the snake, very Jim Morrison". This one is a GREAT follow up for those who liked VAMPIRE SCIENCE. It'll have you racing to the Castro or searching for what lies in the water under the Golden Gate Bridge. It's Kate and Jon at their Kerouacky best. And Sam finally gets some...
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5.0 out of 5 stars Everyone needs to be mugged by a unicorn at least once, December 26, 2009
This review is from: Unnatural History (Doctor Who Series) (Mass Market Paperback)
Ah, it's nice to see a pair of adults running the show for once.

While there's been a general uptick in quality to the BBC books up until now, for the most part the books have been merely competent, with a flash of real imagination once in a great while. The stories did seem resigned to basically do what the authors considered "standard" Doctor Who tales, when the standard for Doctor Who is that we should be surprised every time out by what the line is capable of. Yes, those are high standards but it would be nice if someone shot for them. I don't want to feel that things are safe or set, I'd like the impression that things could change at any second, and not always for the best. That the characters live in a constantly shifting universe that is strange and odd and not always on their side.

This isn't a radical redesign or fantastically groundbreaking but it does show the sign that someone is thinking these things through. It picks up on a thread from Lawrence Miles' "Alien Bodies" that hinted that Sam's history had been altered at some point, that the blonde vegetarian righteous Sam we knew had once been a dark haired, sometime drug addict, rather mundane and not real ambitious Sam. Miles' novel sort of left it at that by this book takes that ball and runs as far with it as it can go, with blonde Sam falling into a scar in time very early on and being replaced by the dark haired Sam, who has none of her memories of hanging out with the Doctor and is only really like Sam very far under the surface.

Meanwhile the Doctor has other issues going on, with the TARDIS trapped inside the scar and slowly dying, San Francisco being full of all kinds of weird beings and places, making it even stranger than usual. Weird grey men are running around looking for him, the words biodata keeps cropping up an awful lot, an "unnaturalist" is collecting specimens and a group called Faction Paradox is having a grand ol' time with all that's going on, and seems to be manipulating the Doctor into joining them down the line.

If it sounds like there's too much going on, that's more or less true and the story doesn't give you a really good chance to get into the secondary characters, spending more time with the leads, which in itself isn't a terrible thing. Fortunately Orman and Blum are veterans at doing this and are able to keep a good balance between "Wow!" and the emotional hooks that a story like this requires. They get a lot of mileage out of the shifted dynamics between the team members, with Dark Sam not fitting into a place she's apparently always been. The authors make her a separate character that is exactly like the one we knew, which is no mean feat . . . and while one can quibble that she winds up trusting the Doctor quite easily, it's also good to note that she's the same person, just with different life experiences. Unfortunately, she's also a little more interesting than blonde Sam, even if the dark and edgy aspects of her never really become prominent. She's just a more confused and less capable Sam in parts.

Fitz comes across really well and it's amazing to see how well they've been developing his character. By turns swaggering, hopeless and fumbling, clever and a step behind the Doctor, he's a good portrayal of someone who is starting to realize he's way the heck out of his depth and the one person who acted as a guide is now even less capable than he is. Plus it marks an interesting change between Sam and Fitz that is both odd and organic.

All of this skips along as the authors throw in every literary trick they can get away with, news clips and bizarre page layouts for the Great Hunt sequences, as well as packing the story with as many ideas as they can. Unicorns and beings from higher dimensions and the lurking threat of Faction Paradox, all handled with a sense of wonder and menace. Its uncanny how they manage to make the book so dense.

In the end it's not the plot that matters so much, unfortunately. You know the Doctor is going to win and get the TARDIS back, and you can almost guess at the cost. But for a while there literally anything can happen and the ending opens up to something terrible that's going to happen down the line. Seeing the Doctor caught on the back foot for a good portion of the book and recover is entertaining enough, but knowing he's going to fall hard not too long from now gives the book a momentum and excitement that we don't get too often with these. It's all going somewhere and that's nice.

None of this would work, however, if the authors weren't able to make the ideas and situations emotionally compelling, something the other writers tend to forget in the midst of time travelling madness. Everyone, no matter how absurd, feels real, the imagery gallops, the situations are remarkably tense and while this novel plays off too many other threads to really stand on its own or be a true masterpiece, it's consistently engaging and promises well for what's to come.
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