REALLY strong horror, pretty good Doctor Who as well. Trevor Baxendale balances some delightful body horror with some really nice character dynamics. Good book all round

greenLetterT
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REALLY strong horror, pretty good Doctor Who as well. Trevor Baxendale balances some delightful body horror with some really nice character dynamics. Good book all round
greenLetterT
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Review last edited on 29-12-24
Basic Plot:
The time: August 1933.
The place: The sleepy English village of Marpling.
A bioweapon from the future has accidentally landed in the garden of one Charles Rigby. And a trio of time travelling commandos have been sent to retrieve it. And if things go south, they have permission to nuke the area. But something has found and activated the weapon before them. The Doctor has faced many terrifying creatures in the universe. The Daleks from Skaro. The Cyberman from Mondas. And who could forget the dreaded Quarks? But tonight, the Doctor must face the most evil, ruthless, creatures in the cosmos…
Wasps.
- Negatives
+ Positives
Conclusion:
I have my problems with Trevor Baxendale, but I genuinely can’t deny how good his Doctor Who output is. Eater of Wasps is up there with Fear of the Dark and Prisoner of the Daleks as some of his best work, and some of the best Doctor Who books in general. While it does suffer from quite a bit of story looping and not knowing what to do with its companions, Eater of Wasps is a standout and accessible EDA. And thankfully, one you don’t have to spend an arm and a leg to get.
WHOXLEY
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Review last edited on 10-06-24
This review contains spoilers!
(Note: I wrote this originally on TheTimeScales.)
Man… I’ve only read 3 of Baxendale’s books (Fear of the Dark, Prisoner of the Daleks, and this.), and the one constant thing I can say to him is that the man can consistently write some top-notch Who.
This is a pretty traditional (sometimes predictable) story with some cliched characters, a standard 1930s English village, and a typical monster of the week story but it does it so effectively while not being boring. The threat of the wasps is just soooo Doctor Who, it’s glorious. And the elements of body horror in this sooooo goood. Disturbing but soooo gooood.
This story almost reminds of something from the Hinchecliffe Era, more specifically The Seeds of Doom. The Doctor really invokes this being both seemingly flippant to the chaos and deaths around (even going to ship for mint humbugs and offer it to people like Baker) while being very serious and determined to stop the wasps and the impeding doom of nuclear destruction. Oh yeah… another element of this story that invokes Seeds vibes is the growing tension that builds through the story. We get introduced to a group of time agents hunting down a weapon of mass destruction and have the duty of retrieving before it sets off or nuke the whole village of Marpling. This story does an excellent job of building the sense of things going from bad to worse to literally how do we even fix this.
The one thing I can even slightly criticize is the usage of Fitz and Anji. While I’ve only read them one time, that being The Crooked World (another phenomenal book), they’re really interesting and fun characters that I wish for more things to do in this story but even then they have their moments.
All in all, this is just a solid piece of Who. I almost wish this was a televised story because I think this would be a highlight in the show. Highly highly recommend checking this out and reading it. Excited to get to read another Baxendale book, Deep Time with 12th Doctor and Clara.
FromThePlanetClom
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Review last edited on 2-05-24
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