laladylynda's review

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3.0

Mixed bag but a good light read... My ratings by each story:

The Futurists- 2 stars (super confusing)
FAQ- 5 Stars
Betrothal of Sontar- 4 stars
The Lodger- 3 stars
Green-Eyed Monster- 1 star. Oh god it was SO BAD. Sooooo bad. I probably would've given this whole collection 4 stars if it wasn't for this.
Interstellar Overdrive- 3 stars
Opera of Doom- 3 stars
Warkeeper's Crown- 5 STARS!! AND MY FAVE! Very well done, and loved Brigadier as always. Really captured the Doctor Who spirit.

The stories I felt didn't quite capture the Doctor persona well got lower stars- sometimes they went overboard with his or Rose's sarcasm.

nwhyte's review

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3.0

http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1453165.html

Somehow more sure of its ground than the collected Ninth Doctor which I read a while back, and surprisingly grownup in places. The title story, The Betrothal of Sontar, by John Tomlinson and Nick Abadzis, is an interesting retake on Colony in Space with Sontarans instead of human colonists; of the two protagonists, one is nasty even by Sontaran standards, the other somewhat unrealistically nice. Gareth Roberts' The Lodger, on which tonight's broadcast episode is rather loosely based, is a nice nine-page vignette of the Doctor turning up alone on Mickey Smith's doorstep and irritating the hell out of him (so who will be the Mickey character tonight?). F.A.Q., by the excellent Tony Lee, is a surprisingly dark tale of adolescent fantasies and repressed memories spinning out of control. The Futurists, by Mike Collins who is also the penciller for this and the three previous stories, combines some excellent one-liners with a thrilling combination of the Milan of 1925, Roman Britain, and sinister time-travelling jellyfish. Jonathan Morris has a space-opera pop group on its last legs in Interstellar Overdrive (the title doesn't quite say it all but does say most of it). He returns to music in the rather slight Opera of Doom, featuring aliens which absorb and also transmit musical talent. This is followed by an equally lightweight story, The Green-Eyed Monster by Nev Fountain, in which the Doctor snogs Jackie to save Rose's life (in Rose's last regular strip appearance). We finish with Alan Barnes bringing back the Brigadier in The War-Keeper's Crown - not one of Barnes' best efforts but since he is one of the best contemporary Who writers that is still pretty decent. All in all, strongly recommended.

bookworm42's review

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3.0

I enjoyed it; the stories weren't amazing nor were the drawings but it was my first Doctor Who graphic novel; I might get another...
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