Skip to content
TARDIS Guide

Overview

Released

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Written by

L.D. Lapinski

Pages

128

Time Travel

Past

Tropes (Potential Spoilers!)

Celebrity Historical

Location (Potential Spoilers!)

Galápagos

Synopsis

Some discoveries should never be made…

When Charles Darwin takes a break from a long sea voyage to look for shells on the Galapagos Islands, he finds two things that really shouldn’t be there. The first is a sunbathing Doctor. The second is a fresh Silurian skull . . .

When more Silurians are discovered by Darwin’s crew – alive, this time – there is pandemonium. And when the island’s volcano starts erupting, years ahead of schedule, it looks like all-out war.

The Doctor has his hands full. Can he keep Charles – and his evolutionary theory – alive?

The history of science is at stake.

Add Review Edit Review Log a repeat

Edit date completed

Characters

How to read Charles Darwin and the Silurian Survival:

Reviews

Add Review Edit Review

1 review

Charles Darwin meets Silurians. L.D. Lapinski was very limited in what could be done in this book. Darwin's history is known, the Galapagos are still there, and we know enough about the history of Silurian interaction with humans that there weren't many options about what the outcome of this interaction could be. In a sense, despite the Silurian element to it (or partly because of it), this story is very true to the type of historical the show presented at the very beginning.

Somehow it all works. I never met Darwin myself, so I can't say how accurate the portrayal here is, but young Charlie is a very enjoyable character to spend time with. The Silurians...

Oh, side note: I don't know why the Doctor refers to them as Silurians here, and I especially don't know why the reptiles themselves never comment on the misnomer. That's just wrong.

...the Silurians come across as real people, true to what we've seen of their race. The story wraps up quickly at the end. It's easy to see where more plot (or more running around) could have been added in a longer book, but the Icons range are rather short, so for once promises made are actually kept without the betrayals that usually extend the narrative. Nice change of pace, that.

I do like the cover as well, even though the image of Darwin reflects his appearance later in life, not the much younger version seen in the book. Looking back, the same could be said of the Frida Kahlo offering, though in that case it did not strike me at the time.

I'd recommend this one as a light read. Just make sure you don't go into it expecting something meaty.


Open in new window

Statistics

AVG. Rating5 members
4.00 / 5

Member Statistics

Read

6

Favourited

0

Reviewed

1

Saved

1

Skipped

1

Owned

1

Quotes

Add Quote

Submit a Quote