
Book #37 of 2026:
Doctor Who: The Pit by Neil Penswick (Virgin New Adventures #12)
This Doctor Who novel is so bad that it had me looking back over previous stories I’ve rated as three-out-of-five stars, wondering if I’d been too harsh on them. It’s both overstuffed and incredibly disjointed, offering not so much a plot as a string of events that barely connect to each other even by the end.
To wit: the Seventh Doctor and Bernice travel to a certain alien world in the past because she’s always wondered why it mysteriously vanished. They swiftly get separated, and he ends up with the poet William Blake, who’s somehow been transported there from his own time and place. The two men eventually find a portal that brings them first to Victorian-era London, where they unmask a cult behind the Jack the Ripper killings, and then to turn-of-the-century Stonehenge for an encounter with UNIT. Meanwhile, the Doctor’s companion has been kidnapped by an android soldier who’s lost the rest of his squad, who are on the planet to kill two shapeshifters who have taken a number of slaves including one who’s a psychic, while another of the robots winds up traveling with the widow of a scientist who died while researching a strange local phenomenon that turns out to be a mysterious red fungus slowly spreading across the globe and destroying everything it touches. Simultaneously, the narrative is following a police investigation, rioting, and general political intrigues all happening elsewhere in the solar system, for no clear reason at all.
As a work it’s fairly interminable, since the action largely consists of various people walking around in circles, and the Time Lord’s ultimate contribution to the situation is practically nonexistent. He’s there to witness the climactic showdown between two other characters, and Blake’s there to witness him, and afterwards they meet up with Benny again, but that’s about it. I’ll give this title one-and-a-half stars, rounded up, for finally narrowing its story threads at the climax and doing some interesting worldbuilding with ancient Gallifreyans fighting Lovecraftian entities that I appreciate, but it certainly lives up to its reputation as the worst entry of its series so far.
[Content warning for gun violence, rape, drug abuse, and gore.]
★★☆☆☆
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