Stories Book The Eighth Doctor Adventures [Books] War of the Daleks 1 image Overview Characters How to Read Reviews 6 Statistics Quotes Overview Released Monday, October 6, 1997 Written by John Peel Pages 277 Time Travel Future Tropes (Potential Spoilers!) Spaceship Location (Potential Spoilers!) Skaro, Space Synopsis The Doctor is repairing the TARDIS systems once again when it is swept up by a garbage ship roving through space, the Quetzel. When another ship approaches and takes the Quetzel by force, the Doctor discovers that he and Sam are not the only unwitting travellers on board - there is a strangely familiar survival pod in the hold. Delani, the captain of the second ship, orders the pod to be opened. The Doctor is powerless to intervene as Davros is awakened once again. But this is no out-and-out rescue of Davros. Delani and his crew are Thals, the sworn enemies of the Daleks. They intend to use Davros as a means to wipe out the Daleks, finally ridding the universe of the most aggressive, deadly race ever to exist. But the Doctor is still worried. For there is a signal beacon inside the pod, and even now a Dalek ship is closing in... 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 Eighth Doctor Sam Jones Daleks Dalek Prime Davros Show All Characters (5) How to read War of the Daleks: Books War of the Daleks 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 6 reviews 25 February 2025 · 251 words Review by Carter_S Spoilers 1 This review contains spoilers! Okay, this one was good. I started reading this one in 2024, but only recently got back around to reading it, so I started from the beginning. To start off with, I think that 8 and Sam have a very good dynamic, and enjoyed 'watching' them in action. While this story is a bit separationist with these two, that tends to happen in Doctor Who. I enjoyed the callbacks for Planet of the Daleks and the original Daleks. I did, however, find the events of the Dalek Civil War to drag a bit. This may be due to me not really recieving Daleks outside of TV and the Audios, but I found that it tried to inject some pacing where it wasn't nessecarily needed. That being said, I did enjoy the pacing for the most part, the chapters flowing somewhat well between each other. I liked the moral dilemma with the Thals, and how it impacted Sam. And now, for the retcon. The fact that the Doctor didn't destroy Skaro in Rememberance, but a planet the Dalek Prime had made to look like Skaro, from Destiny onwards. This twist, was so unfathomably complicated and timey-wimey, I had trouble understanding it. So, the Prime moves Skaro, because Davros had already destroyed it circa 1963, because in the 2150 invasion, they found out that he'd destroyed it in 1963? It doesn't make sense, and while it does fit with canon, and actually explains how 7 got there in the TV Movie, I still don't quite think I understand it. Carter_S View profile Like Liked 1 8 February 2025 · 474 words Review by uss-genderprise Spoilers 7 This review contains spoilers! I didn't have high hopes for this book. I don't generally enjoy Dalek stories (I find most of them are very same-y and dull), and the general fandom consensus didn't give me any confidence that I would enjoy this (even if I sometimes have very different opinions to the fandom at large, as most people do). Unfortunately, this somehow went worse than I expected it to. The story had a pretty strong start with the prologue showing a well-described battle between the Daleks and the Thals, showcasing the horrors of war. Unfortunately, the rest of the book dropped the ball when it came to grappling with that theme. Sure, Sam is a pacifist and the Thals are too war hungry and Chayn never got to know her dad, but none of that really matters, and none of it carries any emotional impact like the prologue does. When we join the Doctor and Sam and the crew of the Quetzal things are slow, as one might expect the beginning of a story to be. The problem is, the pace never picks up. It feels very much as though the author didn't have enough plot to fill a book and instead decided to pad it out. At the end, I don't feel like I really got to know any of the characters. They're all very one-note, and about half of them die in the first part of the book. Sam basically had nothing to do again, but this time it's made worse by her constantly commenting on it and making me overly aware of it. It doesn't help that her personality is basically reduced to "jealous of anyone who gets close to the Doctor, and also kind of a pacifist". We've spent five novels with her already, you'd think at this point she'd have a personality. The plot itself is pretty thin. The whole thing would have probably gone exactly the same if the Doctor wasn't there. The whole thing with Skaro being destroyed or not is never properly explained - probably to leave room for fans to speculate, but it's just done poorly. Space battles and exploding Daleks are the least interesting thing Doctor Who can do, and even if those action moments weren't badly written and confusing, even if I was watching them on my screen, I wouldn't have enjoyed them one bit. The ending with the Dalek factory on the Thal ship was extremely anticlimactic, even when Sam suddenly realised it might be booby-trapped. Then there were three or four more ending, each slightly more exciting than the last, but at that point I was just so tired of this book I didn't care. And we all know Davros will be back in five books. The most fun thing about this book is that now it's over and I can read Alien Bodies. uss-genderprise View profile Like Liked 7 20 January 2025 · 379 words Review by mndy Spoilers 2 This review contains spoilers! After how cool and original 'Genocide' was, this was a bit disappointing. I didn’t adore this, but I did like it. This is very much a Dalek story about Daleks fighting to see which Dalek is Dalekier. Even the Doctor in the end is inconsequential to their shenanigans; the Dalek Prime is kinda like “oh, the Doctor’s here?? uh, okay i guess put him on hold, get him some tea, I’ll talk to him in a bit”. The writing style wasn’t all out bad or anything, but the poor Doctor has metaphorically look the reader in the eye and explain the plots of like 3 separate classic Who stories, which was a kind of lazy way of setting the stage here. Not sure how I feel about the twist with Skaro never having been destroyed. I get your frustration, Davros. It’s cool to see the Daleks being crafty, and I love their infighting, but this plot took so many turns and had so many “but AHA! it’s not over!!!” moments that I was as dizzy as Sam by the end of it. Speaking of Sam, congrats on your first Dalek encounter, girl! One thing that I disliked in this story was that, like in ‘The Bodysnatchers’, Sam didn’t get to do much. She asked a lot of “what’s that” and “what’s going on”, and she did have at least one important conversation with Ayaka, and consoles the Doctor when he gets upset, but there was no big moment for her. Any clever insight she had on the Daleks’ plan was something any character could have noticed, so it didn’t feel like those bits belonged to her. Again, Sam herself notices that the side characters get much more to do than she does. Okay, she is a teenager from the 80s with no technical skills, fine, she can’t reverse the polarity of the neutron flow. If her role is more of a ‘moral compass’, that’s great, but it wasn’t as well done as it could have been. Like, Sam herself got some development, internally, but her being there for this adventure didn’t help the other characters or the plot develop, I guess is the feeling I have. mndy View profile Like Liked 2 24 December 2024 · 102 words Review by TNT 2 2/5 The subject of this book is possibly more interesting to others, and I certainly did enjoy the odd scene early in the book. Aside from the odd moment early on though this book was just boring really: side characters as nothing more than templates, main characters having little real contribution to the story, long sections of events repeated from multiple perspectives but with no new insight that the alternate perspectives might have given, and sections of story that seem to bear no relevance to anything else in the book in particular. There’s better stories and more interesting Dalek stories out there. TNT View profile Like Liked 2 1 June 2024 · 115 words Review by PexLives 2 I read about two thirds of this but could not for the life of me finish the novel. One of the dullest, most lifeless prose I’ve ever read, at least since John Peel’s previous book, Timewyrm: Genesis. Sam is reduced to just getting jealous of other capable women around the Doctor, which is in line with her character, but she’s also very capable in her own right. The supporting cast is frustratingly bland and if I’m being honest most of them blend together in my mind. I don’t much mind the fact this whole novel is a canon plaster, but it’s not a good book in its own right. PexLives View profile Like Liked 2 Show All Reviews (6) Open in new window Statistics AVG. Rating63 members 2.54 / 5 GoodReads AVG. Rating475 votes 3.17 / 5 Member Statistics Read 92 Favourited 6 Reviewed 6 Saved 5 Skipped 5 Owned 4 Quotes Add Quote Submit a Quote