Stories Short Story Time Lord Fairy Tales The Garden of Statues 1 image Overview Characters How to Read Reviews 2 Statistics Quotes Overview Released October 2015 Written by Justin Richards Pages 36 Synopsis Children have always played in the garden of the Big House - though sometimes, the stone statues there seem to move about of their own accord. One fateful day, two children venture up to its door, to find out what lurks inside once and for all... Read Read Favourite Favourited Add Review Edit Review Log a repeat Skip Skipped Unowned Owned Owned Save to my list Saved Edit date completed Custom Date Release Date Archive (no date) Save Characters Weeping Angels How to read The Garden of Statues: Books Time Lord Fairy Tales [Slipcase] Books The Garden of Statues Books Time Lord Fairytales Reviews Add Review Edit Review Sort: Date (Newest First) Date (Oldest First) Likes (High-Low) Likes (Low-High) Rating (High-Low) Rating (Low-High) Word count (High-Low) Word count (Low-High) Username (A-Z) Username (Z-A) Spoilers First Spoilers Last 2 reviews 30 December 2024 · 138 words Review by kevinwho Spoilers This review contains spoilers! On one hand, it is a shame the Time Lord Fairy Tales collection doesn't have more stories like this. That is to say, stories that are original, and not simply familiar stories with a Doctor Who veneer plastered over them. On the other hand, fairy tales usually contain lessons, they show the virtuous get rewarded and vices get punished. This one, not so much. I'm not sure you could really describe this as a fairy tale for humans, though it might be a great one for Time Tots, as it shows curiosity having consequences. I do think this tale would make a good ghost story, if you will, to be told around a campfire. A good narrator might even be able to get the campers to see things moving in the shadows cast by the firelight. kevinwho View profile Like Liked 0 22 October 2024 · 85 words Review by JayPea 2 A great start to the collection, this is exactly the sort of thing I expected from doctor who themed fairy tales. Children facing monsters, a lighthearted and warm start, it gets spooky and dangerous in the middle, and a twist end that's bittersweet and has an air of nostalgia. The only thing missing is a moral, but I guess 'Avoid the weeping angles at all costs' is good enough (plus there's a lot of fairy tales without them that are just there to spook kids. JayPea View profile Like Liked 2 Open in new window Statistics AVG. Rating156 members 4.17 / 5 GoodReads AVG. Rating156 votes 4.17 / 5 The Time Scales AVG. Rating2 votes 4.25 / 5 Member Statistics Read 31 Favourited 2 Reviewed 2 Saved 2 Skipped 0 Owned 2 Quotes Add Quote Submit a Quote