THE DOCTOR WHO RATINGS GUIDE: BY FANS, FOR FANS

BBC Books
Engines of War

Author George Mann Cover image
ISBN# 1 84990 848 1
Published 2014
Featuring The war Doctor

Synopsis: The Great Time War has raged for centuries, ravaging the universe. Scores of human colony planets are now overrun by Dalek occupation forces. A weary, angry Doctor leads a flotilla of Battle TARDISes against the Dalek stronghold but in the midst of the carnage, the Doctor's TARDIS crashes to a planet below: Moldox. As the Doctor is trapped in an apocalyptic landscape, Dalek patrols roam amongst the wreckage, rounding up the remaining civilians. But why haven't the Daleks simply killed the humans?


Reviews

The Time War Tale We've Been Waiting For by Matthew Kresal 11/4/15

Since its revival in 2005, much attention has been focused on the Time War, a conflict between the Daleks and the Time Lords that has formed much of the back-story of the New Series. As time has passed, the series has given us references to events and things associated with the Time War and, in the cases of 2010's End Of Time and the fiftieth anniversary special, The Day of the Doctor, glimpses of the war itself and the Doctor who fought it. Following on the heels of the most recent glimpse of the war and the introduction of John Hurt's War Doctor comes Engines of War, a novel by George Mann that promises on its back-cover "An epic novel of the Great Time War featuring the War Doctor, as played by John Hurt." But does it deliver?

Given the limited amount of screen time that Hurt's War Doctor had last year, one of the difficulties of writing a Time War story would seem to be capturing that Doctor. Yet Mann does exactly that here, extrapolating from Hurt's performance who this Doctor is and just what he's capable of doing, from killing an incubation chamber full of Dalek mutants to defying the Time Lords (and just strangling one of them as well). Yet for all of that, there's hints of the man he used to be in here as well and most especially in his interactions with Cinder, who effectively becomes his companion for the novel's duration and whom he admits to having with him "To remind me of who I'm not," at one point. The icing on the cake though might be the dialogue where Mann leaves the reader hearing Hurt's delivery in their mind's ear as it were. Like writers did nearly twenty years ago with Paul McGann, Mann takes Hurt's limited screen time and uses it to create a whole tale based around him.

Along with his capturing of Hurt's War Doctor, Mann is also successful in taking many of the references made to the Time War throughout the New Series' now eight year run and working them into the story. We're presented with the Skaro Degradations (first referenced in the aforementioned End Of Time) within the first chapter and from there we're presented with looks at both Time Lords and Daleks alike, ranging from Rassilon and the High Council to the Dalek's Eternity Circle. In particular, and with just a handful of scenes in the middle of the novel, Mann captures the Timothy Dalton incarnation of Rassilon and offers some details as to how the founder of Time Lord society came to be resurrected. As well as building on the Time War references of the New Series, fans of Old Series stories set on Gallifrey will likely pick on references and appearances by characters from at least a couple of those stories, including a surprise appearance by one Time Lord character in particular. Combined with references to events stretching across the Time War and its effect on the universe at large, the novel presents the most complete picture (albeit in prose) of the Time War fans have yet had.

Above all else, the novel shows us the events that led this Doctor to the point we saw him at in Day of the Doctor. Early on in the novel, we're given confirmation that this the older Doctor we saw in that special, though he certainly proves himself more than capable of action. The fact that it's set at that point is key as the events of the novel provide the bridge from the warrior to the old, bitter, perhaps even depressed man we meet in the special who has decided that there's no other choice but to use the Moment. While the fact that we're not given a bigger picture of the Time War might come as a bit of a disappointment for some, Mann more than makes up for any disappointment through the references mentioned above and with an action-packed tale that shows us the width and breath of the Time War across time and space and its effect on this incarnation of the Doctor.

So does Engines of War live up to its promise? The answer, thanks to the perfect capturing of Hurt's War Doctor and the action-packed plot, is a most definite yes. This is the Time War tale that fans have been waiting for since 2005 and a must-read for Doctor Who fans.