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Lance Parkin - Doctor Who author
Time Lines
Doctor Who: A History of the
Universe was a brave topic to tackle for a reference book. What kind of reaction
did you get from other Who academics, and is there anything about the chronology
you've since reconsidered?
The Who academics seemed to like it, although a few purists questioned whether the books should have been in there. It was first published as a fanzine \x96 and I sent it to Andrew Pixley, who\x92s eyes glazed over when I told him what it was, because apparently people come up to him twice a week to tell him they\x92ve \x91solved UNIT dating\x92 and the like.
But he liked it enough to make suggestions and to write a foreword, in which he said some very nice things. Everyone has their own little theories, and so not everyone has agreed with every word of it. But on the whole I think it was received well, and it squared the odd circle or two. The secret was that I wasn\x92t imposing my theories, just reporting what was said in the programme.
There are places \x96 the twenty-first century being one of them \x96 where you
have to play around a bit, because different stories say such different things.
People get worked up about stuff, but that\x92s the appeal of the game. I always
made sure to present all the evidence, and it\x92s quite fun to see people make a
case against me using evidence that they didn\x92t know about until they read my
book!
Happy Anniversary
The Infinity
Doctors was a prestigious commissioning from BBC books. Why do you think you
were the man they entrusted with celebrating the Doctor's 35th Anniversary?
1998 wasn\x92t exactly awash with anniversary fervour \x96 a thirty-fifth anniversary is an odd one, isn\x92t it? I don\x92t think there\x92s even an adjective \x96 I used to tell people it was the Diamonique anniversary. So I don\x92t think the BBC were exactly falling over themselves to celebrate. I suspect I got the gig because I was the only person who\x92d spotted it was an \x91anniversary year\x92.
The original plan was to do a two book thing, with Kate Orman and Jon Blum writing the other half. Their book, \x91Mentor\x92, was about an old Time Lord who\x92d gone mad. We knew that there was this sort of observer effect in the Who universe \x96 this idea of \x91observed history\x92, with the Time Lords as the observers. So we had the idea \x91what if one of the observers went mad?\x92 \x96 he\x92d see stuff, and by observing it, he\x92d make it real, but he was loopy, so that meant the universe ended up as mad as he was.
And with that in mind I wrote a PDA in which the Fourth Doctor and the Mary Tamm Romana fight a monster called Centro (which I\x92ve since learned is the name of the bus company in Birmingham!), and he could bend time and space. And he bent it so that the Doctor never left Gallifrey, and was stuck in this dreadful place, dreaming of exploring the universe. It was\x85 unconsciously, I hasten to add\x85 a complete rip off of the Alan Moore Superman story For the Man Who Has Everything.
Steve Cole, the editor at the time, liked that chapter and hated everything else about it, so I reworked it. But as soon as I did that, I realised this was a unique chance to do a story that could be outside the normal \x91continuity\x92 \x85 about continuity. Which I found quite a fun idea. And I also realised that most of the readers would be expecting the bit where the universe goes all wobbly and turns back into the \x91real\x92 Doctor Who universe, and once I decided not to do that, it was very liberating.
The idea was that there would be a war criminal type in both our books, and depending on which one you read first, you\x92d get a completely different appreciation of the situation. If you read the book in which he was an old librarian who just wanted to be left alone first, you\x92d think the Doctor was a bully. If you read the book where you saw him in his prime, massacring innocents, you\x92d want the Doctor to murder him in cold blood. The vestige of that idea ended up in Beige Planet Mars.
Then it became clear that Kate and Jon would be too busy doing Seeing I to do
Mentor. A lot of the ideas from it ended up in Unnatural History, and if you
read The Infinity Doctors and Unnatural History one after the other, you can see
that they share a lot of the themes, images and so on.
Hopeless
Having tackled Adric in Cold
Fusion, what would you say were the character's good points?
He proved to be mortal.
No \x85 it\x92s really embarrassing. I found a school exercise book from 1981 where I did a write up of The Keeper of Traken novel, and I say Adric\x92s my favourite character.
I think he probably was an identification figure for a lot of the audience. He works well with Tom, where he essentially just stands in a corner and gives the Doctor enough space to do his thing. He\x92s hopeless with Davison.
I wrote an article on this for the Enlightenment fanzine,
and it\x92s on their website. I\x92d advise anyone who\x92s now got a taste for Who
authors making an ass of themselves to look there.
Dying to see
it
Rare books of yours such as The Dying Days are now
going for silly money on E-bay. What are your thoughts on that?
There\x92s a craven, greedy part of me that wishes I hadn\x92t given away all my author\x92s copies, because I\x92d have got more selling them on E-bay than I did for writing it! And I could have a lovely revenue stream if I got a pound every time I got an email asking if I had a spare copy.
Contrary to rumours at the time, it had a normal print run \x96 what Virgin couldn\x92t do was reprint it, they were forbidden to by the terms of the licence, even though it sold out six weeks before its official release date. It was the nearest thing I\x92ve ever been involved with to a \x91phenomenon\x92 \x96 it just vanished from the shops, and the shops were furious they couldn\x92t get any more.
The thing about E-bay is that it\x92s not like a comics shop or something just slapping a silly price on it and looking for a sucker to buy it \x96 people bid that much money because that\x92s what they think it\x92s worth. It\x92s a buyer-driven market in the sense that the buyer decides the price. That said, I was contracted to write a book that I hope would provide \xA36 worth of entertainment. People have spent hundreds on The Dying Days. I hope it wasn\x92t a disappointment.
But I\x92ve always regretted that not everyone who wanted to read it got to read
it. It was a good book, I thought, one I was incredibly proud of, and of being
asked to do. I\x92ve been looking for a way to get the book to everyone that wants
to read it...
Developing the Doctor
Having written the Eighth Doctor's first original adventure in
print - has he developed in the way you would have liked him too?
Oh yes. Re-reading The Dying Days, it\x92s amazing how much things have moved on in the last five years. But that\x92s the whole point of a running series \x96 take any five years of the TV show (and certainly any hundred stories, which is how many EDAs there have been) and the show changes beyond measure.
Different writers, different producers, a completely different cast. The whole point of Doctor Who is that it changes, relentlessly riffing on the popular culture of the time, recasting the fears of the day into scary monsters.
Something we all realised when we did our second eighth Doctor book was that you can\x92t keep having this bouncy, child-like lead character. The challenge was to give him some depth without giving him angst. I really think the Earth arc books (The Burning \x96 Escape Velocity) recast him as a viable central character, one who\x92s like the Doctor we know and love \x96 capable of extraordinary brilliance, or of sulking like a little kid.
The adjective we were all throwing around in 1996 was \x91Byronic\x92 \x96 but Byron wasn\x92t a guy who nancyed about picking flowers: he raised armies, shagged his step-sister on her mother\x92s grave and called for the overthrow of governments. We\x92ve now got a Doctor who\x92s extrapolated from the portrayal in the TVM, reaching the potential of it, rather than one who\x92s just copied from it.
Anji\x92s great, too. A character who feels like a real person, not just a character with a backstory. Someone who\x92s of the moment. A companion who you can explain to a new reader without an essay and a six book reading list.
One of the great things about the EDAs now is that you can just pick one up and read it. If people are reading them all, you can see we\x92re building to something, but not at the expense of new readers. Not that long ago, the net was full of \x91which book do I have to read to understand this month\x92s book?\x92 threads. Not any more.
Had the TVM gone to series \x85 well, it would have debuted around the time
Buffy did, possibly before. And it would have changed from the TVM. Think of how
Star Trek: Next Gen changed over its run, despite having a format that really
resisted change. If anything, we\x92ve not changed enough.
No
Future
Do you know what Virgin's plans for the
character were had they retained their license?
They literally didn\x92t have any, because they knew within a week or two of the TVM that the licence was going. Rebecca Levene, the commissioning editor of the range, and I only discussed the one book.
Hypothetically, I think it would have been a good excuse to draw a line and come up with an entirely new \x91feel\x92 for the range. They\x92d have had either Benny or Grace as the companion \x96 definitely not Sam \x96 and that would mean that the Doctor and companion were far more \x91equals\x92 than they\x92d ever been before.
I could really see the Doctor and companion having a Steed and Peel relationship \x96 on screen, both equal to the task of fighting monsters, off screen shagging like rabbits, even though they never quite come out and admit it.
One thing I also thought of \x96 St Oscars in the Benny books, the university she worked at - provided a useful base and a cast of recurring supporting characters (about two of whom ever recurred, but we\x92ll say no more about that). And in the TVM, it really looks like the Doctor is based on Gallifrey. So he might have been based on Gallifrey in the EDNAs.
I quite like the idea of the Doctor as a teacher, raising the next generation of Time Lords, now the Time Lords are fertile again. That would\x92ve also brought a new dynamic into the books. And it\x92s what he\x92s doing in The Infinity Doctors, of course. So perhaps The Infinity Doctors is set in the universe where Virgin kept the licence. Or perhaps I\x92m extrapolating wildly. I\x92d stress that these discussions never took place at the time, these are just my guesses.
Practically, they had the writers they had, and it\x92s not a wild leap to say that the early EDNAs might have ended up with the same authors as the first Benny books. Possibly even the same books! But I\x92d imagine Paul Cornell would have written the first one, then Matt Jones and Justin, with Vampire Science not far behind. I don\x92t think in the parallel universe where Virgin kept the licence that we\x92d be looking at a completely unrecognisable range.
A lot of the early EDAs (all of them, I think, up to Alien Bodies, not including Vampire Science) were unused Virgin New Adventures, I think \x96 a fair few were out and out NA rejects, so obviously they wouldn\x92t have made the cut. The biggest shift in the range would have come when Rebecca left Virgin, which would have happened at the same time.
I suspect, by now, that we\x92d be pretty much where we are. In the end, despite
all the announcements to the contrary and a couple of false starts, the BBC Who
book format and writers guidelines started off as close to Virgin as they could
get without actually jumping into a hot air balloon and opening a chain of
Megastores. I said at the time that they weren\x92t so much stepping into Virgin\x92s
shoes as mugging them for their Nikes.
Three years in the
Woolpack
Why the three-year break between The Infinity
Doctors and Father Time?
Quite simply I was working on Emmerdale as a storyline writer, and that took up all my time. Well, that and my Dalek book, Enemy of the Daleks, fell through. It would have come late in 1999 \x96 I keep saying that Parallel 59 replaced it, and Steve Cole keeps correcting me that was the book before that. But I thought I was leading into Shadows of Avalon.
Anyway, it didn\x92t get very far \x96 a synopsis, then half a reworked synopsis \x96 before I realised that I didn\x92t really have the time, and the BBC weren\x92t that keen on pursuing the Nation estate for the rights.
I only sat it out for a year or so \x96 Father Time was commissioned at the same time as the other Earth arc books, in about October 1999. And Enemy of the Daleks was being discussed around autumn 1998.
I\x92m glad I had the break \x96 I\x92d been writing Who fiction non-stop for a few
years, and going away really recharged the batteries and gave me new
perspectives.
Family Fun
Tell us your
thoughts about creating a daughter for the Doctor.
It was a blatant attempt to write \x91my Human Nature\x92. I love that book, and what I love about it is having the Doctor confront his human side, and find himself wanting. That line about \x91two hearts and no love\x92. The Doctor can do all these fantastical things, but he\x92s not quite a full human being, he\x92s not quite emotionally literate.
As I\x92ve said before, when I\x92m writing a Doctor Who book, I think of the most absurd non-Who like idea that I can, and try to get it to work. And the idea here was an image of the Doctor hugging a young girl, and saying \x91you\x92re my daughter, and I\x92ll always love you\x92. It\x92s just not the sort of thing he does. So how did he get there?
I was really worried about Miranda stealing the limelight, but in the end
she\x92s a wonderful mirror for the Doctor - she really helps define him. I didn\x92t
write Human Nature, but I got a good book out of it.
Trading
Futures
Tell us about your latest novel, Trading
Futures.
OK. It\x92s set in the near future, sometime in the 2010s, with the Eurozone (basically a Eurosceptic nightmare federal EU) on the brink of war with the United States. Europe is an emerging superpower, and America has been the only superpower for a generation, so there\x92s friction, with Britain caught in the middle as the two blocs gear up for a war.
The various secret services of the world are aware that someone\x92s selling a time machine, and they\x92ve realised that anyone with a time machine will have a massive advantage. So they go after the time machine. And the Doctor and friends land right in the middle of all this, and have to prevent a world war, not to mention various nasty people and things getting the time machine.
No-one had written a \x91near future\x92 book for a while, and I think we\x92re in
that mood right now \x96 new century, new scientific advances and political
developments.
Doctor... No?
Judging
from the book, you're as much of a Bond fan as David McIntee. Why do you think
Who books in this style work so well?
Bond\x92s an action adventure series, like Who. The films started about the time Doctor Who did on TV, and they changed the lead actors, and both are British, and self-aware and products of their time. So they sort of track each other, like a pair of weird cousins who hate each other and only meet every third Christmas but turn up wearing the same tie. They\x92re completely unlike each other, but you can tell they somehow fall into the same set, and a lot of Who fans are also Bond fans.
Everyone knows Bond, they know the set up, the icons, the clich\xE9s. So it\x92s easy to play on those conventions.
For Trading Futures, Bond represents a very specific \x91spirit of England\x92. Cosgrove is (and I mean \x91is\x92 here in the very precise, non-trademark violating, sense of the word) the Sean Connery Bond, but one who never retired and who\x92s been a secret agent for fifty years. So he\x92s about eighty, and all the time he\x92s just been piling on more muscles and getting more wrinkled, and ever more set in his ways and bitter and anachronistic.
He\x92s Sean Connery in The Rock, as drawn by Frank Miller, and by now he\x92s been promoted to M. And he\x92s got it in for the Doctor, because the Doctor is everything he isn\x92t, and more to the point, the Doctor outsmarts him in Chapter One.
God, don\x92t you want to buy this book already?
Anyway, he\x92s in the book as representing that part of the UK that will
forever not be a part of Europe. A maddening mix of xenophobia and global
vision, of pragmatism but belief in his country. A Little Englander without a
drop of English blood in him.
Working without a net
Doctor Who hit the reset button with The Burning. How do you
find writing for a Doctor with less baggage? Is it liberating or restrictive?
Ditto the destruction of Gallifrey.
I love the EDAs at the moment. They aren\x92t perfect, but they\x92re better than they\x92ve been for years. Anyone who\x92s not reading them \x96 just find a copy of The City of the Dead or Intelligent Tigers or Hope or Anachrophobia or Book of the Still. Don\x92t be put off by the \x91ongoing story\x92, just read one of those books \x96 or pretty much any of them since The Burning - and I\x92m sure you\x92ll find something in there that you enjoy.
Writing for them is great, too. I\x92d always relied on \x91continuity references\x92 in my books, and I still do to an extent \x96 but references to the spirit, not the letter. It\x92s good to be looking forward, not back. It\x92s good to have the Doctor centre stage, as the protagonist.
The destruction of Gallifrey is useful because we\x92ve now got a Doctor who\x92s
operating without a safety net \x96 he\x92s the universe\x92s last line of defence. The
twist being that he doesn\x92t quite realise that. We\x92ve lost a dreary planet that
was already looking a bit creaky by the time of the second story fully set
there, twenty-five years ago, and gained a real sense of dynamism and change.
Primeval Powers
Tell us about writing
Primeval for Big Finish. What, if anything did you change about the Fifth Doctor
or Nyssa and their relationship, and why revisit Traken?
With most Big Finish audios, they\x92ve got an idea for a story, and approach writers with it. And that\x92s what happened with Primeval \x96 Gary Russell asked for something set in the past of Traken, which explained why Nyssa had all those psychic powers in Time-Flight.
I\x92ve got no problem doing that, it\x92s sometimes really useful to have a clear brief, particularly in a running series. You can spend two years just coming up with ideas other people have had, if you\x92re not careful. And if you don\x92t like the brief, you walk away.
I\x92m not sure I changed too much \x96 neither Davison nor Sutton really sound like they did in 1982, so I have a couple of references to the Doctor looking a bit older, and he\x92s more paternalistic to Nyssa and the younger characters. I deliberately gave the Doctor a few jokes, but they mostly got cut out. I tried to give him that energy he has in Androzani, that edge of desperation stuff. I think Davison puts in a fantastic performance, actually.
It\x92s odd, it\x92s really split opinion \x96 half the people are calling it the
worst CD Big Finish have ever done, half think it\x92s great. I don\x92t think it\x92s
perfect, I certainly don\x92t think the script is perfect, but I think it works. A
couple of the people who\x92ve disliked it have said things like \x91people keep
saying Traken is the perfect society, but it\x92s a bit dreary and repressive\x92 \x85
which is sort of like the whole point of the whole thing. It\x92s about people
living in a gilded cage, and doing things that don\x92t match up to their ideals.
Beige Books
How did co-authoring Beige
Planet Mars with Mark Clapham come about? Do you like that kind of collaborative
process?
It came about because Virgin needed a book quickly, because Gareth Roberts was down to write one, and he\x92d just been made Story Editor on Emmerdale, so he couldn\x92t do it, and I was writing The Infinity Doctors, so I couldn\x92t write a whole one. And the first thing Gareth did was hire Rebecca Levene, the book\x92s editor, and the third thing he did was get me onboard. So that kind of messed that plan up.
I\x92d known Mark for years, he wrote a fan novella which was... well, I was going to say \x91brilliant\x92. It wasn\x92t brilliant. \x91Brilliant\x92 would be pushing it, but it had brilliant bits, and a couple of really brilliant characters. It was set in York, and there was a bit with one of the cleaners at the Railway Museum, and his dark secret was that he really hated trains, so every day he was coming in to lovingly clean these things he really couldn\x92t stand. It was just a paragraph, but a really funny one.
And he had this Benny plot and characters looking for a story and a setting, and I had a Benny story and a setting, but no plot or characters. And we slapped them together and that was Beige Planet Mars. I honestly can\x92t remember who wrote some bits of it. We\x92re on the same wavelength on most things. Which is faintly alarming, because he likes Daphne and Celeste. Although it\x92s more alarming for him to realise he\x92s like me, I\x92d have thought.
I really enjoyed it, but it was written quickly, it was written when we were
both busy with a million other things. And we got to three chapters before the
end, and then realised we had not even the slightest clue how to end the book.
Which is readily apparent to everyone that\x92s read it.
Audio
Adaptations
What did you make of the audio adaptation
of Just War?
I thought, at that time, that it was the best thing Big Finish had done (back then, remember, they hadn\x92t done that much!). I liked the script Jac Rayner wrote. Lisa Bowerman, who plays Benny, is a genius.
I wrote I Scream for her on the strength of Just War, she was the main reason
for doing Extinction Event, and I\x92ve even got her to take photos for my new
Emmerdale book (as well as acting, she\x92s a professional photographer \x96 her work
appears in Dreamwatch and DWM, amongst other places). It came out the week
before the Who audio launch, so it sold about six copies, but I really think
Just War\x92s good.
Warlords of Utopia
What else have you been working on, and what's next from Lance
Parkin?
I\x92ve been very busy. It\x92s Emmerdale\x92s thirtieth anniversary year, and I\x92ve been working there on the big anniversary book, out in September. Lots of lovely new photos, literally hundreds of archive ones (I spent a week in there, looking through tens of thousands of contact sheets).
I did the Pocket Essential Alan Moore, a guide to the comics writer, which has proved to be one of the bestsellers of that range. I wrote the tie-in book to SoapStars, the only reality TV talent show that didn\x92t catch the public imagination. I was hoping to retire on the royalties from that, but I\x92ve had to settle for just paying the mortgage for the next year. It\x92s a good book, though, I\x92m really proud of it.
What else? Stuff in the works, mainly \x96 first out will be contributions to
the Benny anthology and the Faction Paradox one. I\x92ve got some other hush-hush
Who things, and possibly another Emmerdale at War novel. And I\x92ve got an EDA
proposal in with Justin called Warlords of Utopia. So I\x92m keeping busy.