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Human Nature
Introduction - Preface by Paul Cornell
Future Shock
This time, it's personal
Human Nature arose out of my frustration with how bad my previous Doctor Who New Adventure, No Future, was. That novel had been an attempt to do the ultimate Who story. It was huge in scope, far reaching in intent. It collapsed onto its face. It was never going to fly.
So my next book, I thought, would be small and personal, and not set its sights too high. I had to finish off the 'seasons' theme that had united the first three of my New Adventures. I also had to deal with Bernice's horror and grief at the end of the previous book in the series, Dave McIntee's Sanctuary.
In that book, Benny's lover, Guy de Carnac, is last seen charging into
overwhelming odds, surrounded by armed knights, the implication being that he's
almost certainly killed by them, while Bernice escapes with the Doctor. And at
the end of the book, I had to make sure that our heroes were on their way to
meet their new companions in Andy Lane's book, which would follow.
Flat out
From Aylesbury to Australia
I was 27, living in Aylesbury with my girlfriend of that time, Penny List, who the book's dedicated to. Most of it was written with me lying flat in front of my computer on the lounge floor, because I wanted all the amenities handy and didn't have a desk. We had a burglary during that time, but the thieves stepped right over my computer to take the TV, and left the machine, manuscript and all.
I also took a long holiday in Australia during the time I was working on the plot, during which Kate Orman and I came up with many versions of how things should go. This is one of the two New Adventures we plotted together, the other being her Return of the Living Dad.
In many ways, it all started when I got onto the wrong train at Aylesbury station, and ended up waiting around at the wrong halt, with a copy of Peter David's Star Trek: The Next Generation novel, Imzadi. Gareth Roberts and I had been talking about the possibilities of trashing continuity altogether, doing something that just ignored the series' accumulation of stuff.
I thought that David had managed to do something moving in that novel that,
through taking the story forward and ignoring the shackles of the past, broke
almost every rule of his book line. That in turn made me think that nobody had
ever really done mythologist Joseph Campbell's 'Hero's Journey' for the Doctor,
the plot that's most commonly recognised in popular culture as that of Superman
II, where the hero gives everything up to discover what normal humanity is like.
Fertile ground, I thought.
Only Human
Plotting problems
The central issue of the Doctor becoming human wasn't a problem. Everything else was. Kate and I hacked the plot back and forth endlessly during my stay in Sydney, and an Adelaide-based fan called Helen Reilly was a major help too, as were a group of wonderful Melbourne fans, notably Sean-Paul Kelly, whose hospitality overwhelmed me. All of Australia had a hand in Human Nature!
First the villains were ecologist terrorists with Krynoid pods, then they were the Hoothi, from Love and War, then all thirteen incarnations of one evil Time Lord, who went about in a big gang.
The last one was a possibility until series editor Rebecca Levene pointed out to us all the problems involved. The setting was going to be Cheldon Bonniface, in modern times, with Rupert Hemmings' head ( both from Revelation) being reinvigorated by Krynoids, Hoothi spores or whatever. (Some of that stuff ended up in Happy Endings.)
Then the setting changed to just before World War Two, but Rebecca and I were
both fed up with Nazis, and I wanted the war that was looming on the horizon
during the book to be a genuinely meaningless one. Finally, Kate and I made the
plot work, and I went home to Britain to do the same with the book.
Taking Notes
Forsaking flipcharts
A lot of the research material was found for me by a friend called Esther Page, a specialist on World War One. Books are always written by a load of people working together, and as can be seen from the above, Human Nature was no exception.
In the accompanying notes, I don't intend to 'explain' the novel. Saying "do you see what I did there?" and underlining the point of every decision would just take away a lot of the point of reading a book. Either you get what's happening, or you don't, and I shouldn't be there like the elephant/shrimp comedy double act from Muppets Tonight, with a flipchart and diagrams, ready to tell you why the jokes are funny. I have to rely on the original material to get my point across.
What I will be doing is pointing up work issues, why I made some of the
decisions a writer makes, making clear any references to the previous New
Adventures and the TV series, so newcomers can keep up, and generally telling
you about issues arising, and where my head was when I wrote this.