Stories Book Virgin Books Transit 1 image Overview Characters How to Read Reviews 3 Statistics Related Stories Quotes 1 Overview Released December 1992 Written by Ben Aaronovitch Pages 264 Time Travel Future Location (Potential Spoilers!) The Solar System, Earth, England, London, Mars, Pluto Synopsis "Oh no, not again..." It's the ultimate in mass transit systems, a network of interstitial tunnels that bind the planets of the solar system together. Earth to Pluto in forty minutes with a supersave non-premium off-peak travelcard. But something is living in the network, chewing its way to the very heart of the system and leaving a trail of death and mutation behind it. Once again a reluctant Doctor is dragged into human history. Back down amongst the joyboys, freesurfers, chessfans, politicians and floozies, where friends are more dangerous than enemies and one man's human being is another's psychotic killing machine. Once again the Doctor is all that stands between humanity and its own mistakes. Read Read Favourite Favourited Add Review Edit Review Log a repeat Skip Skipped Unowned Owned Owned Save to my list Saved Characters Seventh Doctor Bernice Summerfield Fred First Appearance STS Kadiatu Lethbridge-Stewart First Appearance The Brigadier Show All Characters (6) How to read Transit: Books Transit 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 3 reviews 25 July 2024 · 271 words Review by Shayleen Spoilers 3 This review contains spoilers! One of the first VNA's I attempted to read back around 2017/18, I only got around 50 pages in before being sidetracked until this month and finally completing it, in quite quick time. Not one of my favourites, but definitely better than I feel the general consensus is. Rereading those first 50 pages I find so many scenes have stayed in my head, the prologue is a lovely couple of pages, the Doctor and Kadiatu have a lovely scene in a bar, the guest cast are interesting. Aaronovitch injects a lovely amount of diversity here, something Classic Who did not have enough of. The world building is strong, and the location headings for each change of perspective is a very helpful way if keeping track of where we are. Bernice, on her first adventure following her introduction last novel, is sadly sidelined and we don't get to spend much time with her as she is possessed for most of the story. She still has moments to shine, but it's not as many as would be ideal for a new companions first proper adventure. I feel some of the writing in action sequences and describing the technology can be a bit muddled and I did find myself losing focus at points, somewhat unclear as to what was happening. A glossary in the back was helpful, moreso for the terminology of this future setting. Overall rate this a 7. It is above half of Timewyrm and all of Cats Cradle, but not as good as the previous couple of novels. But it is an intriguing experience and one I look forward to rereading in a few years. Like Liked 3 31 May 2024 · 499 words Review by BillFiler Spoilers 4 This review contains spoilers! Mission Report by UNIT Agent Bill Filer to Trap One - Subject matter: Transit How to make this review without being as sexually explicit as this book? 🤔 Let's just say that if "Kola nuts" pop up in future books I will not look at them the same 😳 I'll try to keep it clean, but did we actually need a story that include a scene about how a prostitute cleans her nether region? This is really a very straightforward plot for a futuristic sci-fi book (sentient interplanetary transit system gains consciousness when stretched to go interstellar and goes rogue) - then Ben Aaronovitch takes too many cues from Marc Platt and makes it as convoluted as possible. Marc Platt just have a better handle on convoluted storytelling. If tightened up and rigorously edited this could have been a really good 50-page short story in my opinion. Having Benny possessed in her first proper outing as a Team TARDIS member was a bad call, I would much have preferred to have a story that highlights her best features and gives us more information on our brand new companion. It gives the impression that Aaronovitch is only interested in the on screen companion that he helped create. Ming was totally unnecessary for the story and it could have worked just as well if not better if she had been cut in editing. She was fleshed out as a character (polyamory and a preference for floor sex, again with too much graphic sexual content - did we really need to know about her first climax?) but in the end she was expendable to the story. The Angel Francine was a tad confusing I'll admit, a blind hacker/crime boss/fighter pilot/friend of the Doctor - what was she really all about? Make her make sense! 😉 And was the Flying Dutchman she encounters supposed to be a version of the Doctor as Merlin? Kadiatu Lethbridge -Stewart is a good character - even if you disregard her family heritage. Genetically engineered or enhanced, genius-level time travel theory student with a hard edge and a heart of gold - that's a proper sci-fi character. Her sexual encounters were really unnecessarily graphic in their nature and overshadowed the story. Include sex in a story all you want, but it should work within the framework of the overall universe - for Doctor Who I would argue that you can include pre-coital and post-coital scenes but should refrain from the "middle bit". Graphic sex is in the end what is memorable about this novel, which is just a giant detriment to the story. I think Aaronovitch is going for adult storytelling here, but misses the mark completely and end up with a juvenile, adolescent approach - he tries to push the boundary for graphic content by using a rocket launcher. This is taking "not understanding the assignment" to the next level. Seriously that sentence with the Kola nuts? 🤨 End of report. Logged and filed at The Black Archive. Like Liked 4 3 May 2024 · 1097 words Review by PalindromeRose Spoilers 4 This review contains spoilers! Virgin New Adventures #010. Transit ~ 1/10 ◆ An Introduction Doctor Who has long had a fascination with the London Underground, ever since they decided to have a bunch of robot yetis stalking the tunnels, on behalf of a sentience from the pre-universe. Now imagine taking the general concept of the Underground and converting it into a transit system that spans the entire Solar System! Oyster Cards at the ready people, as we tackle one of the most notorious books in the ‘Virgin New Adventures’. ◆ Publisher’s Summary "Oh no, not again…" It's the ultimate in mass transit systems, a network of interstitial tunnels that bind the planets of the solar system together. Earth to Pluto in forty minutes with a supersave non-premium off-peak travelcard. But something is living in the network, chewing its way to the very heart of the system and leaving a trail of death and mutation behind it. Once again a reluctant Doctor is dragged into human history. Back down amongst the joyboys, freesurfers, chessfans, politicians and floozies, where friends are more dangerous than enemies and one man's human being is another's psychotic killing machine. Once again the Doctor is all that stands between humanity and its own mistakes. ◆ The Seventh Doctor Aaronovitch really managed to screw up the characterisation, didn’t he? The Doctor is acting completely out of character in ‘Transit’, even getting black-out drunk at one point! The Doctor had a cavalier attitude to first steps. A quick look round with the Tardis scanner, he puts on his hat, opens the door, and out he goes. He happens to be a doctor of everything. He sees someone in danger and he tries to save them. He cannot help himself. When the Doctor is asked why he has two hearts he claims it’s because he’s the anomaly, the spanner in the works, the fly in the ointment, the cheese grater in the goldfish bowl. ◆ Bernice Summerfield ‘Transit’ is the first novel to feature Prof. Summerfield as an active companion, and she gets kicked to the kerb almost immediately! I cannot blame Aaronovitch for that though, as she was a last minute addition to the book. In Benny’s experience the first step into a new environment could kill you faster than a bad-tempered Dalek. You were supposed to be cautious. The explorers’ manual had a checklist: check the atmosphere, check for bugs, animals, subsidence, solar radiation, check that the god-damn landing ramp had extended properly. It went on for fifteen pages. ◆ Underground, Overground, Buses And Bikes! The reputation of this book precedes it. Ben Aaronovitch was already quite well known in fan-circles when ‘Transit’ was released, having previously written one of the best Dalek serials for television. I can only imagine then how shocked people were to discover his name attached to such an abysmal story as this. One of the most important aspects of any book is immersion. If your dialogue is incredibly clunky, or the world-building is paper thin, then I simply wont feel invested in the story you are trying to tell. Do you know what manages to break the immersion with the ease of a homewrecker breaking up a shaky marriage? Forcing me to glance at the final pages of the book every couple of seconds, because you couldn’t be bothered to do any proper world-building, meaning that you need a two-page glossary to explain all the various bits of slang and techno jargon! Going back and forth from chapter to glossary was already getting on my nerves by the time I’d finished the first chapter, so imagine how I felt having to do that throughout the entire book. I’m nowhere near done slating this publication, but I think we can all agree that ‘Transit’ is atrociously written. ◆ Edgy Tripe! I understand that the ‘New Adventures’ were aimed at a more mature audience, the people who had grown up watching Doctor Who on the telly and were young adults by the early nineteen-nineties. The fiction was growing up alongside its fanbase, but it’s incredibly easy for a writer to confuse a mature narrative with the edgy tripe you would’ve found festering on Tumblr before the big purge of December 2018. Fourteen instances of the f-word, characters using drugs throughout the book, and a graphic scene of intercourse that goes on for two whole pages. What in the name of sanity was going through Aaronovitch’s head when he decided that these things would be great additions to a Doctor Who novel? Then you have perhaps the most infamous scene in the entire book, which happens on page forty-four. The majority of reviews have already discussed what that scene entails, so I wont bore you by going over it for the umpteenth time, but I genuinely cannot understand what possessed Aaronovitch to put THAT line into this book. ◆ Conclusion “This train terminates here.” I always wondered why BigFinish decided to skip this book, especially considering it was Benny’s first trip in the Tardis. Now I understand why. Telling you all that ‘Transit’ is apocalyptically awful is like flogging a dead horse at this point. This book is notorious across all corners of the fandom for being the worst thing Ben Aaronovitch has ever written. I was genuinely shocked to see his name attached to such utter drivel, given that he was responsible for ‘Remembrance of the Daleks’ - one of the greatest serials from the dying days of Classic Who. The Doctor spends a whole scene getting mortal drunk on cheap booze, whilst his new companion is possessed by an all-powerful entity for the whole book – thus having little chance to make an impression on the reader. Unapologetically vulgar and filled to bursting with some of the most unlikeable and boring characters you will ever encounter. It’s utterly staggering that ‘Transit’ got published in the first place. Avoid it like the Bubonic plague! Like Liked 4 Open in new window Statistics AVG. Rating37 members 2.22 / 5 GoodReads AVG. Rating488 votes 3.25 / 5 The Time Scales AVG. Rating23 votes 2.80 / 5 Member Statistics Read 53 Favourited 1 Reviewed 3 Saved 2 Skipped 1 Owned 3 Related Stories DWM Preludes Prelude Transit Rating: 3.31 Story Skipped Short Story Reviews(1) More Actions View Sets Close Related Sets Set of Stories: Doctor Who Magazine Preludes Add Review Edit Review Skip Skipped Unowned Owned Save to my list Saved Quotes Add Quote Link to Quote Favourite ’Are you sure,’ asked his companion, ‘that this is the nineteen-eighties?’ The Doctor looked around. ‘Which nineteen-eighties did you have in mind?’ — Transit