Ratings1
Average rating4
"One wouldn't normally expect to find elephants, gorillas and rhinoceroses roaming free in Suffolk in the year 1911. One wouldn't normally expect to find an extra-dimensional police box at the same time/space location either. Two aliens, named the Doctor and Nyssa, exit said box, only to find themselves pursued by a hungry lioness for they've landed in the private hunting grounds of the famous explorer Nathaniel Whitlock, who's brought together a motley group of friends and acquaintances for a weekend's shooting. But one of Whitlock's guests isn't all they seem. One of them wants the secrets of the Moonflesh, the mystic mineral looked after by Whitlock's retainer, a Native American known as Silver Crow. Because the Moonflesh is reputed to have the power to call down spirits from another realm, and soon, the hunters will become the hunted."--Container.
Featured Series
256 primary booksBig Finish Monthly Range is a 256-book series with 256 released primary works first released in 1995 with contributions by Mark Gatiss, Justin Richards, and Stephen Cole.
Reviews with the most likes.
With the action restricted to a stately home in southern England in the year 1911, comparisons with the TV story Black Orchid (set only a decade or so later) are perhaps inevitable, and, especially in the early stages of this tale, they're probably justifiable. As it progresses, though, the stronger parallel seems to be with Kinda, both in terms of the supporting characters and the abilities (if not the nature) of the monster.
In many respects, this is a base-under-siege, where the defenders are mainly stock characters from adventure tales - the blustering explorer, the glamorous daughter, the evil industrialist, and so on. Some might well regard that as too simplistic for their tastes, but I found that they were all acted well, without descending into overblown caricature, and that, in any event, they suit the sort of Edwardian adventure story that we have here. Indeed, there's a bit more complexity to most of the characters than at first appears - the industrialist is an exception, as is his son, who's really only there as a love interest for the explorer's daughter.
Yes, the story is something of a romp, and not particularly deep, but it's a good romp that fits the Fifth Doctor and Nyssa well, and that's supported by some quality soundscaping. It perhaps veers more towards fantasy than outright SF, especially in the sequence set in the Spirit World, but does so in a way that doesn't feel out of place in the DW universe.