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Mark Clapham

Auteur de The Taking of Planet 5

21+ oeuvres 608 utilisateurs 11 critiques 1 Favoris

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Crédit image: Mark Clapham

Séries

Œuvres de Mark Clapham

The Taking of Planet 5 (1999) 173 exemplaires
Hope (2002) 144 exemplaires
Beige Planet Mars (1998) — Auteur — 71 exemplaires
Twilight of the Gods (1999) — Auteur — 56 exemplaires
Iron Guard (Warhammer) (2012) 24 exemplaires
Secret Histories (2009) — Directeur de publication — 20 exemplaires
Venus Mantrap (2009) 11 exemplaires
The Siege of Fellguard 3 exemplaires
The Hour of Hell 3 exemplaires
Hollow Beginnings (2015) 2 exemplaires
Dead Stop (2014) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Short Trips and Side Steps (2000) — Co-Author "A Town Called Eternity (Parts Ones and Two)" — 137 exemplaires
The Book of the War (2002) — Contributeur — 80 exemplaires
Fear the Alien (2010) — Contributeur — 72 exemplaires
Present Danger (2010) — Contributeur — 20 exemplaires
Deathwatch: Ignition (2016) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
Perfect Timing 1 — Contributeur — 13 exemplaires
In Time (2018) — Contributeur — 5 exemplaires
Hammer and Bolter: Issue 20 (2012) — Contributeur — 3 exemplaires
In●Vision: Remembrance of the Daleks (2001) — Contributor "Review: Remembrance of things past" — 2 exemplaires
Astra Militarum eBundle (Warhammer 40,000) (2014) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1976
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK

Membres

Critiques

https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3182199.html

This is a collection of nine Bernice Summerfield stories, with a linking narrative by Mark Clapham which rather loosely connects them. Just to flag up the two stories that stood out for me one way or the other: "The Illuminated Man" by Mark Michalowski takes Benny's son Peter into a dangerous environment - captive of a freak show, where he has to unravel a mystery for himself. It showed an underplayed character in a new light. On the other hand, Eddie Robson’s "The Firing Squad", which is linked to "The Illuminated Man" and the Sherlock Holmes pastiche "A Game of Pigeons" by an insufficiently explained plot device, has Peter's father Adrian in a rather ridiculous odyssey across wartime France, walking from one nick-of-time adventure to another.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
nwhyte | 1 autre critique | Apr 28, 2019 |
2009's Bernice Summerfield book is another anthology, with a frame story that fleshes out what Benny was doing between deciding to confront Braxiatel at the end of Secret Origins and being captured by a giant robot in Dead and Buried.  On a dig, Benny discovers a collection of sentient skulls at the site of a war crime, and ends up telling them stories to pass the time. The stories cover a wide range of her life, but there are essentially three or four clusters: a few from her youth, before she had her graduate degree; a couple from the heyday of the Braxiatel Collection, when it was her and Adrian and Jason; a couple from her freelance on-the-run-from-Brax years; and then a number following on from the end of Secret Origins, as Benny and company plan their next move against Braxiatel and in the meantime have some wacky adventures.

I like the diversity on offer here. It's nice to see a young, inexperienced Benny alongside an older, but more carefree Collection-era Benny alongside her present-day status quo. And Mark Clapham's frame story is suitably atmospheric, additionally raising the kind of issues that work well with Benny as a character: dealing with the consequences of history and memory. But though Bernice Summerfield usually thrives in the anthology format (during the Big Finish era, the weaker books have almost always been the novels), Secret Histories isn't among the best of them. It's hard for me to put my finger on it, but I just felt like a lot of the stories here were weirdly plotted, not really coming to climaxes even when they had a solid foundation.

For example, there's a set of stories built around a common incident, where a mysterious machine shunts Benny, Adrian, and Peter back in time: Benny ends up in 1914 England, where she once again encounters Mycroft Holmes and John Watson; Adrian lands in World War I-era France; and Peter ends up in a vaguely Victorian freakshow. Each of the stories is evocatively written, with a great concept. But each one just kind of stops: in Jim Smith's "A Gallery of Pigeons," Mycroft deduces a time-travel mystery but it's more of intellectual interest than dramatic; in Eddie Robson's "The Firing Squad," a pair of alien time travelers (who I think are meant to be pre-existing characters?) tell Adrian what was going on; and in Mark Michalowksi's "The Illuminated Man"... I don't really know what happened at the end. Each story seems quite good until the disappointing endings, though, which is all the more frustrating. Smith is good at the retro-Sherlockiana, Robson does a great job with Adrian's character in an unusual situation, and Michalowski likewise has a good handle on the adolescent Peter.

So it's not like it's a bad book or a waste of time. Benny is a great character, and it's nice to hear from Collection characters like Adrian who have had their roles diminished with season 9's format change, such as in Cody Schell's "You Shouldn't Have," where Adrian and Benny crash-land on a planet where it's the height of masculinity to wear flowers. I also really enjoyed Lance Parkin's "Young Benny" tale, "A Game of Soldiers," a brutal and effective story of Benny reluctantly having to play a role in the Dalek Wars when she's accidentally drafted. And Nick Wallace's "Turn the Light On" is creepy and disorienting.

I did find that the resolution to the frame story followed the same pattern as many of the individual stories, in that it ended disappointingly as well: Benny makes a sort of nonsense technobabble deduction to wrap it all up, which undercuts the emotional potential that had been built up in the until-then effective scenes of her interactions with the skulls. It's not the worst Bernice Summerfield anthology (that's either The Dead Man Diaries or Missing Adventures), but it is underwhelming given the quality this range often provides.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stevil2001 | 1 autre critique | Sep 28, 2018 |
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2766518.html

This is the very last of the Bernice Summerfield Virgin New Adventures, closing a series of 23 novels which I think is the longest sequence for any one companion (there are only 19 Torchwood books). It's decent enough but not great; it winds up the Gods storyline established earlier in the sequence, without really tying much into the books in between. Benny, Jason and Irving Braxiatel get some good moments, and there is a crazed cult bent on human sacrifice. The series doesn't really end with a bang, but it's not a whimper either.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
nwhyte | 1 autre critique | Feb 4, 2017 |
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2645391.html

I really liked this, and I write as one who has often bounced off Lance Parkin's work (and sometimes Mark Clapham's). Mars, whose history was the foundation of Bernice Summerfield's early career, has become both a home for the elderly (due to low gravity) and a centre of commemoration (due to war). Benny gets involved with dangerous investigations into what really happened, complicated by a rekindling of affection for her disreputable ex-husband and various strange individuals each with their own agenda. There is even a sentient computer which failed to annoy me as they usually do. I must have been in a good mood when reading it.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
nwhyte | 1 autre critique | Apr 17, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
21
Aussi par
10
Membres
608
Popularité
#41,354
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
11
ISBN
18
Langues
2
Favoris
1

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