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Lawrence Miles

Auteur van Alien Bodies

33+ Werken 2,005 Leden 38 Besprekingen Favoriet van 5 leden

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Werken van Lawrence Miles

Alien Bodies (1997) — Auteur — 228 exemplaren
Interference, Book One: Shock Tactic (1999) — Auteur — 196 exemplaren
Interference, Book Two: The Hour of the Geek (1998) — Auteur — 190 exemplaren
The Adventuress of Henrietta Street (2001) — Auteur — 160 exemplaren
Christmas on a Rational Planet (1996) — Auteur — 149 exemplaren
Down (1997) — Auteur — 86 exemplaren
The Book of the War (2002) 80 exemplaren
This Town Will Never Let Us Go (2003) 72 exemplaren
Dead Romance (1999) 61 exemplaren
Dead Romance {2004 special edition} (1999) — Auteur — 46 exemplaren
The Adolescence of Time (2008) 18 exemplaren
A Romance in Twelve Parts (2011) — Redacteur — 12 exemplaren
Sabbath Dei (2002) 6 exemplaren
Shadow Play 6 exemplaren
The Eleven Day Empire (2001) 6 exemplaren
Coming to Dust (2005) — Auteur — 6 exemplaren
Grass 4 exemplaren
Body Politic — Auteur — 4 exemplaren
Ozymandias — Auteur — 4 exemplaren
Ship of a Billion Years — Auteur — 4 exemplaren

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Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1972-03-15
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
UK
Geboorteplaats
Middlesex, England

Leden

Besprekingen

Alright, alright, quit torturing me and I'll confess! Yes, it's true: I don't get on with Lawrence Miles. He's just... too much.

To recap for newcomers: Miles is something of a cult figure in Doctor Who fandom. As a very young man, he made his name writing several novels for the range, at a time when prose was the main medium for the series, and thus highly important. Although he went on to write plenty of sci-fi novels and other works during the 2000s and 2010s, and thus I'm sure considers himself to have made a considerable achievement in the world of letters, he never got what many of his comrades received: TV fame. Many of the (slightly older) luminary writers of the novels and short stories - among them Russell T Davies, Paul Cornell, Mark Gatiss, Chris Chibnall, Steven Moffat, Gareth Roberts - went on to be heavily involved in the TV program, not to mention now noted speculative fiction writer Ben Aaronovitch. Lawrence Miles had a different journey in mind.

Miles' view of what Doctor Who could be (should be?) is markedly different from Davies and Moffat in particular. They envision a family-friendly program, focused (to a certain extent) on standalone hours of television which are fan-inspired but can appeal to grandma or your lunkhead cousin. Miles wants the program to be more along the lines of those old sci-fi series like Farscape or Babylon 5: dense, complex sci-fi stories, deliberately plotted over multiple seasons, even though they will languish on cable channels and be ever at the brink of cancellation. The fact that Davies views Who as a modern drama in the soap opera mould and Moffat sees it as a fairytale without the need to dig deep into character or science especially galled dear Lawrence. He was boisterously, savagely critical of what he perceived to be the former's faults, but was - dare I say - venomous and rancorously unpleasant about the latter. (As it happens, I share ol' Larry's view about Moffat, although I also recognise he made an entertaining program that delighted millions. Conversely I think that Russell produced some of the best Who in its history. So, there.)

How does this impact Alien Bodies? Well, Miles had already written numerous books but this was his first for the new Eighth Doctor range, where he had more opportunity to influence the world-building and broader concepts of the series. And, my goodness, he went broad. There are a heckuva lot of ideas on display here. A putative future in which the US (or at least a Republican-controlled part of a Balkanised former US) invaded Canada. In which the military organisations at the heart of the series for decades were broken up and replaced. In which science has found a way to bio-engineer leopards whose visual and aural memories are passed through their urine, allowing people with the right technology to "read" those memories from puddles of the stuff. In which a species is able to exist as a type of mental parasite, inside your head and communicating with you by manipulating your mind to read their words in newspapers and signs. In which a dead man shows up to an auction, and it's a perfectly normal part of his species. Not to mention the expansive editions to the program's own mythology: semi-sentient TARDISes from the Doctor's future! A military-industrial complex that has been trying to find ways to assassinate the Doctor for three hundred years! A Time War taking place well into the Doctor's future which could destroy his people! Not to mention an age-old cult of Time Lords who thrive on tearing apart the rules of time.

You see what I mean? It's a lot.

Now, there are two schools of thought here. One would say that Miles' approach is simply "not Doctor Who". Every framework should be malleable but there are limits to what can be part of a series and what can't. (I think of those Murder, She Wrote episodes from the show's middle years where Angela Lansbury was overworked and so a completely unrelated detective would investigate a completely unrelated case for an entire episode. Multiple times a season. Was it really MSW or just a way to sell some ads?) If you need to rewrite vast tracts of what we've known for thirty-five years and disorient the physics and history of the world we've come to understand, have you in fact just created your own program under someone else's banner? The other viewpoint is that this is the very reason Who stagnated in the 1980s and, indeed, into the novel range. It had been playing it safe, Who by numbers, and it was time to tear down the fabric and start weaving it again.

Ultimately, I'm in the first camp. I agree that the program could play it safe, and I have found several of the other novels dissatisfying for this reason. Indeed, given that it's clear that Davies and Moff stole or absorbed or coincidentally latched on to several of Miles' ideas (I suspect all of the above, as some of them - like the sentient TARDIS - are clearly lingering in the air in fandom) for the TV series, Miles is not completely out of the realm of possibility. But there are just so many ideas all the time. He wants to make the world weird and conceptual and Douglas Adamsy, and as someone who doesn't enjoy Adams and rather likes his stories to make some level of sense, this isn't for me. There are some phenomenal moments, and I admire that he rehabilitated the Krotons. And I'm sad to make this complaint because, as I say, I am broadly anti-Moffat. I want my stories full not empty, I want my stories to have ideas not just plots. But this just made me tired. And it's not merely the concepts that annoyed me; there's a level of pretention to the approach which I couldn't endorse. The 25-year-old author has a confidence in his own abilities which isn't always matched by the output. Take for himself his occasional interruptions into the narrative voice ("It was a Kroton thing; they wouldn't understand") which strive for for playful but read as juvenile. Of course, the range's editors bear some responsibility for this. The cute allusions to popular sci-fi of the time (Twin Peaks, The X-Files, etc) are the kind of "clever" elements I would have included in my story ideas of my early 20s, so I see what Miles was going for. But we're a long way from that period now, so they help to date the book dramatically. (Not in itself a fault; authors don't tend to write books for consumption 25 years later, and nor should they. And this has been a problem with most authors of this range. But it stings nevertheless.)

(I amend this review to note that I recognise some of the circumstances which led to this. The BBC had reclaimed the novels from Virgin Publishing, had set about without much initial guidance in order to get the series going and, allegedly, had an editor who didn't really care at the time. Miles took what he saw as a dull companion and a bland focus and determined to knock it on its head. For that he can be commended, and I'll be intrigued to see whether the novels fight back or if they accept this new direction. I suspect not.)

I don't feel great about criticising Miles for his ambition or his iconoclastic nature, but sometimes these things must be said. Grand ideas can be positive; I recently read Paul Leonard's Venusian Lullaby which does a wonderful job of bringing several challenging approaches into the standard Doctor Who framework. "Everything and the kitchen sink too" can also be a valid approach; I've enjoyed every one of Gareth Roberts' novels, and he's never one to leave any passenger behind. Uniting those two approaches though proves to be an aggressive combination, at least for this naive millennial reader.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
therebelprince | 2 andere besprekingen | Oct 24, 2023 |
A major (two volume) upgrade of this book is to be released in 2023, removing some of Miles' work (no doubt) as Tat Wood is now the central author of these, having already released updated versions of the other colour Doctors. I think this version is verbose and self-consciously erudite enough for me, actually!
 
Gemarkeerd
therebelprince | 5 andere besprekingen | Oct 24, 2023 |
DNF . this one failed the 100 page rule. Too much sex and violence but not enough story to make up for it.

re-read 9/9/2023
 
Gemarkeerd
catseyegreen | 2 andere besprekingen | Sep 11, 2023 |
The book was written almost like a history, which made it hard to get through. Almost no dialogue whatsoever.
 
Gemarkeerd
lemontwist | 2 andere besprekingen | Sep 3, 2023 |

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Statistieken

Werken
33
Ook door
7
Leden
2,005
Populariteit
#12,841
Waardering
4.0
Besprekingen
38
ISBNs
27
Favoriet
5

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