cosmic_celery: (DLM: mason sonnets)
[personal profile] cosmic_celery
Excerpt from an EDA, The Deadstone Memorial by Trevor Baxendale, which I finished today:

For the first time Fitz actually found himself having to contemplate a future here on Earth. Stuck here on Earth. That's what it felt like. The Doctor had been spot on, of course, in his assesment: Fitz was scared of the Earth, scared that one day he might be forced to choose between his home planet and the TARDIS.

Or that the choice would be made for him.

"How long are we going to give it?" Trix asked quietly as she sipped her coffee.

"As long as it takes," Fitz said.

Trix pursed her lips, and Fitz guessed that she was probably getting itchy feet. Without the prospect of being able to whiz of to another place, Trix was already getting bored. She didn't have the same feelings that he did for the TARDIS and the Doctor. To her, traveling the cosmos was just an opportunity. The TARDIS was just her ticket to a great sightseeing tour of the universe. Without it she would simply move on anyway, looking for the next chance of a hustle. Outside the TARDIS door, her world was still waiting for her.

"Fitz," She said eventually, "Sooner or later you're going to have to face the fact the he's gone. For good.

He shook his head. "No way."

"It's no use just denying it."

"You don't understand," he said bitterly. "You don't know him like I do."

"Nobody lives forever, Fitz."

"He isn't dead," Fitz said bluntly. He let his gaze settle on the control console, watched its little lights blinking slowly in the darkness. "I know he isn't."

He stood up because he could feel his eyes burning and he didn't want her to see. "You can go if you want to, Trix," he told her. "I'm staying." He picked up his mug and headed for his room.

***

And because Fitz without the Doctor makes me sad, here's another bit:

"Bacon, eggs, sausage and black pudding!" said the Doctor.
"With fried bread and plenty of brown sauce!" laughed Fitz.
"And strong, hot army tea!"
"Pure malt Scotch."
"The smell of freshly cut grass."
"The sound of a rotary mower on a summer afternoon..."

They were walking through the dark woods now, keeping to the path in the circle of light thrown by Fitz's torch. They were still bouncing favorite earth things back and forth.

"Snow on Christmas Day," said the Doctor.
"A winter evening in front of a real fire," said Fitz.
"The sound of a cat purring."
"Beautiful women..." said Fitz wistfully.
"Ghost stories!" cried the Doctor. "I love ghost stories. I knew Edgar Allen Poe, you know."
"I could have guessed," smiled Fitz ruefully.



bawww, indeed.

on 2009-10-05 04:38 am (UTC)
ext_134129: (DW: Two knots in my handkerchief.)
Posted by [identity profile] bonamoz.livejournal.com
Trevor Baxendale's novels are the best.

Re: bawww, indeed.

on 2009-10-05 04:46 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cosmic-celery.livejournal.com
And I still haven't read Fear of the Dark. This is my first time reading anything by Baxendale. I liked it...there was something sloppily tied up in the end, but I found I didn't mind very much.

Nothing compares to Paul Magrs' outrageous levels of crack, though.

Re: bawww, indeed.

on 2009-10-05 10:28 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] ulalume-42.livejournal.com
"Nothing compares to Paul Magrs' outrageous levels of crack, though."

Agree with this-Hornets Nest and it's possessed dead animals are a good example of this. And Four deals with them Buffy-style.
(Good luck getting that out of your head!)

Re: bawww, indeed.

on 2009-10-06 12:16 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cosmic-celery.livejournal.com
Oh dear. I haven't read any of the past doctor adventures - he wrote for Four?

I was thinking of the pink talking poodles with hands, mostly. There are a lot of other examples, but that's the one that sticks out the most, I think. And he created Iris Wildtyme, who is made of crack.

on 2009-10-05 05:02 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] studyofrunning.livejournal.com
This is making me want to force myself to finish The Taint so I can move on with the EDAs.

on 2009-10-06 12:17 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cosmic-celery.livejournal.com
DOOOO IT.

...not enjoying that one?

on 2009-10-07 12:15 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] studyofrunning.livejournal.com
The plot was boring, there was no mystery or atmosphere, Eight and Sam both lacked their sparks, I hated every new character in it except for Fitz. Also, Earth in the recent past for a setting misses the point of a TARDIS. Plus I've been reading off of this reclist, and everything else has been recced for being good instead of for being Fitz's first book, so I'm only comparing it to the best ones.

I finished it, skipped Demontage, and am on...that one that comes after Demontage now. Still set on Earth in the 1960s, but hopefully everything else is better.

on 2009-10-07 10:48 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] maypanic.livejournal.com
The best way to read The Taint is to skim pages for the word "Fitz", and only read those pages. It's highly entertaining, and the plot makes just as much sense.

on 2009-10-08 01:27 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] studyofrunning.livejournal.com
haha

When I eventually go back and read through the stuff I skipped, I will have to remember to try that. I'm sure it would make the book a lot more fun. In the mean time, Revolution Man's pretty good so far.

on 2009-11-16 08:35 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] lullabee-lj.livejournal.com
I also skimmed for the bits with the Doctor, myself. Some of them are all right. He annoys a hobo, IIRC.

Also, if you pay zero attention to the plot, you will miss the part where the villainry is perpetrated by one of Fitz's ancestors and a robot. And Fitz's ancestor looks just like Fitz, apparently. He's like this thin, wild-haired guy with a long nose. And the robot, um, can't do some things. I forget what. So it's dependent upon Fitz's evil ancestor and they're actually rather buddy-buddy with each other, and I couldn't help but read it as sort of Evil!Alternate Fitz-and-Eight. It's actually really lulzy if you read it that way...

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