The Nightmare of Black Island

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Doctor Who book
The Nightmare of Black Island
Series New Series Adventures
Release number 10
Featuring Tenth Doctor
Rose
Writer Mike Tucker
Publisher BBC Books
ISBN ISBN 0-563-48650-3
Number of pages 250
Release date September 2006
Preceded by I am a Dalek
Followed by The Art of Destruction

The Nightmare of Black Island is a BBC Books original novel written by Mike Tucker and based on the long running science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Tenth Doctor and Rose.

Like all Doctor Who spin-off media, its canonicity in relation to the television series is unknown. See New Series Adventures Canonicity for more details.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

On a lonely stretch of Welsh coastline, a fisherman is killed by a hideous creature from beneath the waves. When the Doctor and Rose arrive, they discover a village where the children are plagued by nightmares, and the nights are ruled by monsters. Bronwyn Ceredig, the old woman of the village, suspects that ailing industrialist Nathaniel Morton is to blame, but the Doctor has suspicions of his own.

[edit] Plot

While in flight, the TARDIS and Rose dream of a fisherman who is attacked by a creature from the sea. Also appearing in the dream is an 'observer': a young boy. Tracing the source, the Doctor takes them to Ynys Du, a small village on the Welsh coast. They discover that the villagers are terrorised by fantastical monsters which roam the streets and woods at night; the adults are anxious and the children all have nightmares.

The trouble seems to have begun when an elderly Nathaniel Morton returned to the village after many years away and established a 'nursing home' in the Old Rectory. Here, six ancient figures sleep, attached to machines and attended by masked technicians.

The Doctor knows something is wrong, as the monsters do not appear to be the product of a normal evolutionary process. He traces an intereference signal to the abandoned lighthouse on Black Island. Exploring the island with an eccentric local woman, Bronwyn, the Doctor finds an 'interstellar space-hopper' and, in the lamp room of the lighthouse, a psychic transmitter/receiver. Understanding that this is causing the children's nightmares, in turn realising the monsters they dream about, the Doctor is reluctant to dismantle the machine and risk damaging the children. He cannot reach the controls of the telepathic ciurcuits as they are underneath the machine.

Meanwhile, Rose has entered the Rectory in search of further information. She is discovered by the 'medical technicians' who reveal themselves to be the lizard-like Cynrog who, under their chief priest Peyne, are manipulating Morton. Rose is subjected to a mind-scan. The Doctor is alerted to Rose's capure when a Slitheen and an Nestene Consiousness are created and a Dalek is heard nearby.

Having instructed the villagers to keep the children awake (to prevent the appearance of more monsters), the Doctor rushes to rescue her; however, she has already escaped with the help of one of the village girls, Ali. She tells the Doctor of a strange monster she has seen in the Rectory library.

The Doctor sends Rose (with the sonic screwdriver) and Ali to Bronwyn, so she might take them to the lighthouse, in the expectation that the smaller Ali can reach under the alien machinery to alter the settings so it no longer affects the children.

The Doctor takes Rose's place in the Rectory. Following Rose's brain-scan, Peyne and Morton know he is a Time Lord, and are excited by what they might gain from him. They show him the monster in the library. The Doctor deduces that the body is empty, created from the nightmares of the children. Peyne admits that the body is to receive the soul of Balor, their warrior general who had crashed on Earth eighty years earlier. His original body dying, he transferred his soul into the child witnesses of the crash: Morton and the other 'people' attached to the machines.

Moving into the final phase, Peyne orders her Cynrog technicians to attach both the Doctor and Morton to waiting machines, and alters them to induce sleep in the wakeful children so she might continue to harness their imaginations.

The Doctor uses the telepathic machines (which operate at the same frequency as the TARDIS's) to take control. He investigates the memory of the other victims and, through the vision of the small boy -who has appeared at intervals throughout the story- discovers that Bronwyn also witnessed the crash, and contains some of Balor's soul. 'Hitching a ride' on the telepathic waves, the Doctor 'contacts' Rose, instructing her how to alter the machinery to affect adults rather than children.

The newly-created Balor, missing a part of his soul, is mad and ungovernable, wreaking havoc throughout the house. Peyne frees the Doctor, blaming him. 'Balor' takes Morton's mind and revenges himself on Peyne. Before 'Morton-Balor' can attack the Doctor, Ali and Rose succeed in changing the settings on the alien transmitter. The village children wake and the adults dream, starving Balor of imagination and shrinking him until the neuroses of the adults become so trivial he ceases to exist.

Before the alien machines in the Rectory are destroyed by the resulting fire, the 'polarity was reversed' and connecting to Bronwyn, it transfers all the life-force into her. She becomes young again.

The Doctor orders the remaining Cynrog to leave in their spaceship, sending them '40 or 50 parsecs' out of their way, and hinting to Rose that their stasis will be tormented by nightmares of him.

[edit] Continuity

  • When asked by Rose if he ever slept, the Doctor said he didn't (although he'd tried it once). This seems a contradiction of accepted canon, as he has been seen sleeping on occasion (an example is Castrovalva, and he also mentions that his regeneration will be fine after a few hours' sleep in The Twin Dilemma). He also mentions not sleeping in The Last Dodo.
  • At one point, the Doctor uses the computer-enhanced opera glasses seen in "The Empty Child".
  • The Doctor reminds Rose of New Earth when she complains that he never takes her anywhere "nice and warm". Rose then points out that she spent part of that visit possessed, referring to Lady Cassandra.
  • The Doctor uses everlasting matches in the forest, introduced in the previous New Series Adventures novel, The Resurrection Casket.
  • After the Doctor showed his psychic paper to Nathaniel Morton, he was unsure what Morton had seen, as there was no 'after-image'. In The Idiot's Lantern, he glances at the paper to tell Tommy that the guard thinks he's the King of Belgium. In Tooth and Claw, the Doctor seems surprised when Queen Victoria says he's been appointed her 'protector.' It suggests that what the viewer sees is at least partly determined by how specific the person handing it over is ('someone important' vs. 'Invited Guest'), and that if the viewer sees nothing, that's what the paper will show to the holder.
  • When she meets the Cynrog for the first time, Rose mentions the Slitheen. The Cynrog appear to know them, as they correctly identify them as Raxacoricofallapatorians.
  • The Cynrog use Rose's memories to create monsters, specifically the Nestene Consciousness, a Slitheen and a Dalek
  • Rose reassures Ali by telling her that the Doctor gives monsters nightmares. The Doctor previously claimed this in "The Girl in the Fireplace", itself a reference to a line Paul Cornell's Virgin New Adventures novel Love and War.
  • When he sees the monster in the library, the Doctor says, "I know what it's like choosing a body you're happy with". In The War Games, the Second Doctor is forced to change his appearance. He is presented with a range of faces, all of which he rejects.
  • The Tenth Doctor's highly-developed sense of taste is demonstrated again when he identifies 'psychomorphic radiation' by licking some cables.
  • The Cynrog machinery somehow had its 'polarity reversed', a reference to the well-known technobabble of the Third Doctor. The Doctor then says this again about Professor Lazarus' machine in "The Lazarus Experiment".
  • The Doctor concedes that the TARDIS might have had something to do with the final outcome as "she does like to interfere sometimes" - a reference to the TARDIS's interceding in various stories including "Boom Town" and "The Parting of the Ways".

[edit] References

The Doctor mentions parsecs - which Marvin The Paranoid Android says in the radio series of The Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy in reference to how clever the Haguenenons are.


[edit] Audio book

An abridged audio book version of The Nightmare of Black Island narrated by Anthony Head (Mr Finch from "School Reunion") was released in November 2006 (ISBN 1-84607-175-5) by BBC Audio.

[edit] External links

[edit] Reviews