Ratings1
Average rating4
"The Asteroid--notorious hideaway of the piratical Rocket Men. Hewn out of rock, surrounded by force-fields and hidden in the depths of the Fairhead Cluster, their base is undetectable, unescapable and impregnable. In need of allies, the Master has arranged to meet with Shandar, King of the Rocket Men. But the mercenaries have captured themselves a very special prisoner - his oldest enemy, the Doctor. What cunning scheme is the Doctor planning? How does it connect with Shandar's new robotic pet? And just what has happened to Leela? The Master will have to work the answers out if he wants to leave the asteroid ... alive ..."--Container.
Series
114 primary booksAdventures of the 4th Doctor is a 114-book series with 114 released primary works first released in 1975 with contributions by Terrance Dicks, Ian Marter, and Christopher Bulis.
Series
41 released booksThe Fourth Doctor Adventures is a 41-book series first released in 2012 with contributions by Nicholas Briggs, Justin Richards, and Alan Barnes.
Reviews with the most likes.
The Doctor and Leela are captured by the titular Rocket Men and brought to their secret base. That part is over very quickly, and what the story is really about is their attempt to escape and to scupper the villains' plans in the process. The Rocket Men have appeared twice before, although only in BF's Chronicle format, rather than a full play as this is. Knowledge of the previous two stories is entirely unnecessary for this, and, really, they'll work in any order.
Whereas those two had some significant character moments for the companions who appeared in them, and there's some attempt to something similar with Leela here, it's less effective, and, for all the broader canvas allowed by the larger cast, the story as a whole doesn't work as well as its predecessors. It's mainly a run-around, with more action than characterisation, but it has a number of good points that scrape it to three-and-a-half stars, rounded up.
For one, the Fourth Doctor's depiction is good, with a number of one-liners, and K9 is particularly well-used, both in terms of his abilities, and some the lines he's given. The basic idea that the last thing you want to do is capture the Doctor, because then you're really in trouble is particularly played up. For a story that takes place almost entirely in one location, there are a few twists along the way, one of them relying on a flashback scene that comes out of nowhere and feels a bit odd at first until you realise the point of it.
It's also a while before we really see the Rocket Men flying about with their jetpacks, although, once they do, it's quite dramatic. The story ends on a cliffhanger that leads directly into the next release, but would otherwise be self-contained.