Stories Audio Book The Companion Chronicles The Companion Chronicles Episode 7 The Suffering 1 image Overview Characters How to Listen Reviews 2 Statistics Related Stories Quotes Overview Released Saturday, February 20, 2010 Written by Jacqueline Rayner Narrated by Maureen O'Brien Runtime 151 minutes Time Travel Past Location (Potential Spoilers!) Earth, England, London, Sussex Synopsis The TARDIS materializes in England in the year 1912, a time of great social change. The Suffragette movement is lobbying for votes for women, and the skull of the so-called ‘missing link’ has been discovered in Piltdown. While Vicki falls victim to a strange influence, the Doctor and Steven investigate the fossilized remains. The Suffering has been unleashed. Can the travellers survive its rage? Listen Listened Favourite Favourited Add Review Edit Review Log a repeat Skip Skipped Unowned Owned Owned Save to my list Saved Characters First Doctor Vicki Pallister Drahvin Steven Taylor Show All Characters (4) How to listen to The Suffering: Big Finish Audio The Companion Chronicles: The Suffering Reviews Add Review Edit Review Sort: Newest First Oldest First Most Likes Highest Rating Lowest Rating Username (A-Z) Username (Z-A) Spoilers First Spoilers Last 2 reviews 28 May 2024 · 21 words Review by Rock_Angel 1 What an amazingly told story I love the framing device and a scene in part 4 makes me tear up every time Like Liked 1 7 May 2024 · 679 words Review by Joniejoon Spoilers This review contains spoilers! Quite a varied story that has a lot of tones, but knows how to nail them all. First things first, this is the first audio I’ve listened to with Peter Purves. I’m glad to say that he’s just as good at storytelling as Maureen O’Brien, which is a great sign for the audio’s that are coming up. The banter of our two main characters also feels very natural and different now. We now have to future-people in the lead. That changes the way we look at history. A lot of comparatively recent history for us, is centuries away for them. And this story hooks right on that fact. We land in the middle of the suffering, where women are pleading for the right to vote. Vicki and Steven are unaware of women ever having fewer right than men, and are baffled by the primitivity of it all. Shortly after landing, the party finds a skull in the sand, but it seems to react quite strangely to Vicki and other women. Bringing out a strong, innate hatred for men. It turns out the skull can create a psychic link for a creature that suffered in a society where men ruled, and she wants revenge. She does this by creating a web experiences among women (and Steven) and driving up the hate. It’s a decent concept, although psychic links and webs are getting a bit routine now (The unwinding world, The fifth traveller and the web planet come to mind). But the way it is used here allows for some great insight in the history of both our main characters. Looking back on their own suffering as they remember their separate crashes and loneliness. They actually have a lot in common there, so that helps too. The overall handling of the topic is done well too. This is a 60’s doctor, so feminist movements were not as widespread as they would later be. But the story never decides to take the ambivalent route. The doctor is completely in favor of equal rights, and that’s a good call. He takes people at face value, regardless of gender. Of course our other leads do so too. They’re far more advanced than we, the listeners, are. And yet the story still makes it very clear why this subject matters. It’s a very serious topic that is handled astoundingly well. I dare to say it’s one of the most nuanced portrayals of a topic yet. Making clear what matters, while giving its own take without sounding preaching or disingenuous. Frankly it has a lot more depth than I can explain. I am a white guy in my twenties. I have inherent privilege, and am probably not the person people want takes about feminism from. Just know that I am completely on board with equal rights. Hate is always foolish, and love is always wise, after all. But the topic does have a lot of nuance here. It asks several important questions. Why equal rights instead of women above men? What should the role of violence be? What’s the difference between equal rights and complete equality? Tons of important questions are asked and answered. It genuinely makes me feel more aware of the topic. And that’s what makes this story special. It has so many things it wants to do, and manages them all while giving them the layers they deserve. It hits emotional notes, is informative about the time period and gives its own perspective. It’s one of the deepest stories so far, but still has some fun sci-fi elements. The only downside, is that it is dragged down a little by the threat. Its powers of psychic links are generic, and the twist the story has about her origin falls a bit flat. This is relatively minor, though. It is still absolutely worth a listen for all it adds to the characters and the history of the event. It’s wonderful. Like Liked 0 Open in new window Statistics AVG. Rating43 members 3.78 / 5 GoodReads AVG. Rating96 votes 3.79 / 5 The Time Scales AVG. Rating103 votes 4.05 / 5 Member Statistics Listened 68 Favourited 4 Reviewed 2 Saved 4 Skipped 0 Owned 6 Related Stories Classic Who S3 • Serial 1 · (1/4 episodes intact) Galaxy 4 Rating: 2.80 Story Skipped Television Reviews(10) More Actions View Sets Close Related Sets Set of Stories: First Doctor Set of Stories: Doctor Who (1963-1996) Add Review Edit Review Skip Skipped Unowned Owned Save to my list Saved Quotes Add Quote Submit a Quote