Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, by Malorie Blackman, Holly Black, Neil Gaiman, Derek Landy, Charlie Higson, Alex Scarrow, Richelle Mead, Patrick Ness, Philip Reeve, Marcus Sedgwick, Michael Scott, Eoin Colfer
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Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, by Malorie Blackman, Holly Black, Neil Gaiman, Derek Landy, Charlie Higson, Alex Scarrow, Richelle Mead, Patrick Ness, Philip Reeve, Marcus Sedgwick, Michael Scott, Eoin Colfer
Free PDF Ebook Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, by Malorie Blackman, Holly Black, Neil Gaiman, Derek Landy, Charlie Higson, Alex Scarrow, Richelle Mead, Patrick Ness, Philip Reeve, Marcus Sedgwick, Michael Scott, Eoin Colfer
Twelve bestselling authors, twelve Doctors, twelve brilliant adventures in time and space for all Doctor Who fans!
This collection features all twelve original Doctor Who eshort stories, covering each of the twelve Doctors and written by a selection of wonderful children's authors.
Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, by Malorie Blackman, Holly Black, Neil Gaiman, Derek Landy, Charlie Higson, Alex Scarrow, Richelle Mead, Patrick Ness, Philip Reeve, Marcus Sedgwick, Michael Scott, Eoin Colfer- Amazon Sales Rank: #483586 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-05-28
- Released on: 2015-05-28
- Format: Kindle eBook
About the Author Eoin Colfer is the megaselling author of the Artemis Fowl series, Half Moon Investigations, The Supernaturalist, Airman and The Legend of . . . books. His brilliant new series WARP is out now. Eoin lives with his family in Ireland. www.eoincolfer.com
Where to Download Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, by Malorie Blackman, Holly Black, Neil Gaiman, Derek Landy, Charlie Higson, Alex Scarrow, Richelle Mead, Patrick Ness, Philip Reeve, Marcus Sedgwick, Michael Scott, Eoin Colfer
Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. How often do you get all The Doctors together? By J. Carroll As I am a sucker for anthologies dealing with well-known fictional characters from new perspectives (Holmes being a particular favorite) this look at all 12 Doctors was particularly intriguing. Each doctor gets the start treatment in each one of these stories and as with all books of this type some examinations are more successful than others.The First: Eoin Cilfer doesn’t quite get a handle on The Doctor in this one. The Doctor’s surface irascibility comes across, but his more deeply hidden compassion rarely comes to the surface in this tale that is far too action packed and lacking in the more cerebral approach befitting the first doctor. This plot definitely would have been a better fit for the Third.The Second: The combination of impish wit and air of superiority that were the second doctor’s trademarks is better served by Michael Scott. With Scotsman Jamie and bagpipes playing a role in this tale of a forbidden city, this one definitely had the feeling of a lost adventure of the Doctor.The Third: With a nod to Norse mythology, this tale of the third doctor really had an air of a story told too many times in different forms. While the third doctor comes across with the proper personality traits the story does him little justice and becomes a forgettable episode rather quickly.The Fourth: Tom Baker’s incarnation was probably the most idiosyncratic version of the character and the setting of this one serves the forth doctor well. With lines like, “Did it look a bit like a gravel pit? You’d be amazed at how many alien worlds look like a gravel pit.” You get the feeling this Doctor is in on the joke (as well as the author Philip Reeve) taking a shot at the series budget as well as creating that pushing of the fourth wall, bending but not breaking it, even in a story that would have broken the budget if filmed. Maybe a bit too much Leela to be entirely successful, but a fun look at this doctor’s perspective on his travels.The Fifth: An interesting story set by Patrick Ness in a World War II Maine town invaded by creatures that reveal what people think as the truth. The Doctor plays a supporting role to the story, but that was really the way a lot of the fifth doctor’s stories went; he often reacted to situations rather than took the lead and that seemed appropriate for this tale, one of the stronger ones in the anthology.The Sixth: The abrasive sixth doctor foils the plans of one of his old enemies in this one that plays reads like a particularly strong episode of that doctor’s run. (And there were not many in that era) Richelle Mead captures the slightly dysfunctional doctor well in a good SF setting that makes for an enjoyable read.The Seventh: This a really “timey-wimey” episode that features good daleks and a universe gone terribly wrong. The Doctor and Ace are well-served Malorie Blackman’s use of the more bizarre elements of paradoxes and time vortexes to find an interesting conclusion that tries to find a silver lining in returning the daleks back into their original murderous forms.The Eighth: As the eighth doctor only appeared in one TV movie, (with a number of audio plays also continuing his adventures) Alex Scarrow had more of a blank slate than the other authors in this series, and he takes full advantage of it with this companionless tale that focuses on the Doctor’s compassion for human beings and in a basic tale of the Earth being threatened by an intelligent pathogen, even with a bit of the old “deua ex machine” of an answer, the eighth doctor’s humanity comes through.The Ninth: Taking place in between Rose Tyler’s initial reluctance to become a companion and the eventual acceptance of that role, Charles Higson creates a bridge with a story explaining why the Doctor always sticks with human companions and why he went back to ask Rose again. The story itself dealing with world destroyers and Ancient Babylon smacks of the overly familiar, but the ninth and his companion become very real in Higson’s hands.The Tenth: While the story of created world’s based on literature has been done to death, Derek Landy does get this incarnation of the Doctor right with his mix of frantic energy and deep seated emotion and the choice of Martha as the companion was a nice change from the more obvious Rose or Donna.The Eleventh: Neil Gaiman is the rock star of this collection with best-selling author and Doctor Who credits to his name and he shows how well he knows how this universe works with a solid story about very powerful enemies returning from a time lord prison and the Doctor’s attempts to put things right. A definite highlight here and one of the few that you can easily picture as an episode.The Twelfth: Holly Black has the story of the newest doctor and while his personality traits are not easily reconciled with his on screen persona as it really has not been fully developed at this point, sh does right a very good SF story that could have stood on its own without the Doctor and in the case of a brand new doctor, that was probably the best way to go.So if you are a fan of the Doctor there is plenty here to enjoy, but even more casual SF fans will find some solid storytelling.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful. I must say I'm disappointed. By R. L. Wexelblat With the exception of Neil Gaiman's story, I really think most of the authors didn't capture the feel of their Doctor. Now I'm not saying the stories aren't for the most part well-written -- even exciting at times. But as one who has seen all of the Doctors in their primes, I am disappointed by the modern slang, anachronisms, and non-Doctor-like behavior. Ditto some of the companions.If you're not a dedicated fan you will probably enjoy most of the stories. If you are, expect some annoying and even jarring moments. I won't say which, but one of the stories annoyed me so much I didn't even finish it.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Wonderful Book! Authors picked showed exquisite styles! By Kindle Customer I honestly thought all the authors did a wonderful job on this book. There was nothing I really hated about it except one thing, I didn't like how Patrick Ness wrote in second or third person(couldn't really tell) instead of first in the Doctor's point of view. I believe it would flow much better with it in first person, but I'm not one judge an author's style of writing. My personal favorites though were the stories written by Holly Black and Neil Gaiman. They did an exquisite job on capturing the character's personality from the show to text on a page. I have to say Derek Landy also did a pretty good job on the 10th Doctor's personality and how Martha acts as well in the show. Just reading the first sentence from each story told me their style of writing and their personality. Good Work!
See all 12 customer reviews... Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, by Malorie Blackman, Holly Black, Neil Gaiman, Derek Landy, Charlie Higson, Alex Scarrow, Richelle Mead, Patrick Ness, Philip Reeve, Marcus Sedgwick, Michael Scott, Eoin ColferDoctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, by Malorie Blackman, Holly Black, Neil Gaiman, Derek Landy, Charlie Higson, Alex Scarrow, Richelle Mead, Patrick Ness, Philip Reeve, Marcus Sedgwick, Michael Scott, Eoin Colfer PDF
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