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Twelve Angels Weeping

par Dave Rudden

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

Séries: Doctor Who {non-TV}

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685393,081 (4.2)1
On every planet that has existed or will exist, there is a winter . . . Many of the peoples of Old Earth celebrated a winter festival. A time to huddle together against the cold; a time to celebrate being half-way out of the dark. But shadows are everywhere, and there are some corners of the universe which have bred the most terrible things, lurking in the cold between the stars. Here are twelve stories - one for each of the Twelve Days of Christmas - to remind you that to come out of the darkness we need to go into it in the first place. We are not alone. We are not safe and whatever you do: don't blink.… (plus d'informations)
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5 sur 5
I enjoyed this book. It included all my favourite Doctor Who aliens from Weeping Angels to the Judoon. All the story’s were well written and I loved that each story started with an illustration of the species involved. ( )
  dookdragon87 | Oct 25, 2021 |
This is a collection of twelve stories set in the Doctor Who universe, most having some kind of Christmas connection (however slight), most featuring the Doctor, most featuring a monster of some sort. I started reading the book on Christmas Day 2020, and read one story per day, which turned out to be a really fun project.

Rudden had never written any Doctor Who book before this, but alone he has more variety and invention than some Doctor Who anthologies written by twenty-five different authors. Highlights for me included a noir story about a private detective on Gallifrey hired to track down the TARDIS the Doctor stole (containing a surprising but subtle tie-in to Prisoners of Fate, a Big Finish audio dram), a story told from the point-of-view of a Cyberman, a really neat story of the Paternoster Gang, an adventure for Rory and the eleventh Doctor investigating a regicide, and a story of the Master trying to be the Doctor. There was only one I didn't really like, an overly long story of a heist that I didn't really get the point of.

The best story was "The Rhino of Twenty-Three Strand Street," about an Irish girl from 1960s Dublin, chafing in Catholic school, who discovers that a Judoon has moved in next door. Really well told and heartwarming.

All of the stories have a strong sense of voice and tone, short Doctor Who fiction at its very best. This is the twelfth Doctor Who Christmas book I've read, and it's the one I've enjoyed the most except for Short Trips: A Christmas Treasury.
  Stevil2001 | May 7, 2021 |
The wealth of knowledge of, and love for, Dr Who that Dave Rudden has, comes thru in each of these 12 engrossing tales. Having read Rudden's Knights of The Borrowed Dark, I was expecting(and hoping) to be terrified. I was not expecting to laugh out loud numerous times, fall in love or have my heart broken. A must have read for any Whovian ( )
  MaryBrigidTurner | Apr 22, 2020 |
Overall, this was a great collection. There were only a couple of stories I felt were a bit less good than the others. My general impressions of each story are below:

Grey Matter: The theme of plague and quarantine was a bit on the nose for the times we’re in, but I loved Twelve in this story. It showecased to advantage his fierce compassion.

Red Planet: A good story with Four and Leela. Just the right amount of Four’s trickery and Leela’s daring. Leela and the Ice Warrior made good foes, too.

Celestial Intervention — A Gallifreyan Noir: I liked this one very much. To say much about the plot would be spoilers, but the tone is suitably noir, as the subtitle proclaims.

Ghost in the Machine: This one would make a breathtaking episode of the show; I could see it playing in my head. Seems to be set around the time of The Next Doctor, if the Cyber Commander is any indication.

Student Bodies: This one is told as a series of audio recordings, and is set during Series 6 of New Who, featuring as it does The Silence and River Song. I liked the format, and the appearance of River.

A Soldier's Education: Another interesting format: a potted history of the Sontaran empire recited as a subliminal teaching aid to a just-born Sontaran. I totally heard it in Dan Starkey’s voice, as you might do.

The Red-Eyed League: Count me as a fan of the Paternoster Gang. I always enjoy these stories, especially when Strax is trying to solve problems by blowing things up.

The Heist: I found this one a bit hard to follow, because it’s told in “then” and “now” snippets and the switching back and forth made me dizzy. Also not sure I got the ending. Still, a good plot.

The King in Glass: An Eleven, Amy and Rory story that features mostly Eleven and Rory. Rory is on fine form here (“What am I going to be mad about?”) and through his words, brings about the best possible outcome for our heroes.

The Third Wise Man: A War Doctor story is always welcome. For those who like seeing Time Lords doing other things than walking around in ceremonial robes, you might like this one.

The Rhino of Twenty-Three Strand Street: I really liked this one. Ireland, headstrong girls, and Thirteen showing up as the Doctor of the piece. Great story all round.

Anything You Can Do: I was a bit befuddled reading this story, but it had a good twist once I figured it out (duh). ( )
  rabbitprincess | Mar 18, 2020 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3118499.html

Newly published collection of vaguely Christmassy stories set in the Whoniverse, by Irish YA author Dave Rudden (who I confess I hadn’t heard of before). Single-author collections like this are unusual for Doctor Who, especially by an author who hasn’t previously written for the franchise, but I think this is really successful - only eight of the twelve stories actually have the Doctor in them, and often as a background figure while the real action is happening to other people. Rudden pastiches various genres more or less successfully, but also displays a fierce loyalty to Who’s own mythology. The standout story for me was “The Red-Eyed League”, featuring Vastra and Jenny encountering a Sea Devil, a direct clash between Old and New Who. But for my own purposes I also need to point out the second last story, “The Rhino of Twenty Three Strand Street”, set in Ringsend in 1966, and therefore only the second Doctor Who short story ever where the action takes place in Ireland. (The first few paragraphs of the last story, “Anything You Can Do”, are set in Belfast, but with no local colour.) There isn’t a duff story in the lot, though, and it would do well as a Christmas gift for younger (or indeed older) fans. ( )
  nwhyte | Nov 25, 2018 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Dave Ruddenauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Snell, AlexisIllustrateurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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On every planet that has existed or will exist, there is a winter . . . Many of the peoples of Old Earth celebrated a winter festival. A time to huddle together against the cold; a time to celebrate being half-way out of the dark. But shadows are everywhere, and there are some corners of the universe which have bred the most terrible things, lurking in the cold between the stars. Here are twelve stories - one for each of the Twelve Days of Christmas - to remind you that to come out of the darkness we need to go into it in the first place. We are not alone. We are not safe and whatever you do: don't blink.

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