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'Just how technologically advanced are they?'
The Doctor frowned. 'Let me put it this way: they have a non-aggression pact with the Time Lords.'

The Doctor has taken his companions to paradise, or at least the closest thing he can find. A sun enclosed by an artificial sphere where there is no want, poverty or violence.

While Chris learns to surf, meets a girl and falls in love with a biplane, Roz suspects an alien plot and Bernice considers that a Dyson Sphere needs an archaeologist like a fish needs a five-speed gear box.

Then the peace is shattered by murder. As the suspects proliferate, Bernice realises that even an artifical world has its buried secrets and Roz discovers what she's always suspected - that every paradise has its snake.

Ben Aaronovitch still lives in North London, is married and hasn't managed to get any more interesting, but he's working on it.

272 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 1995

2 people are currently reading
566 people want to read

About the author

Ben Aaronovitch

157 books13.4k followers
Ben Aaronovitch's career started with a bang writing for Doctor Who, subsided in the middle and then, as is traditional, a third act resurgence with the bestselling Rivers of London series.

Born and raised in London he says that he'll leave his home when they prise his city out of his cold dead fingers.

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Displaying 1 - 27 of 27 reviews
Profile Image for Avarill.
59 reviews2 followers
January 21, 2014
The Also People (TAP) by Ben Aaronovich is a sort of rebuttal against the angst 'n' gloom trap that many NA's tend to fall into (especially the two preceding books). It is an easygoing, fun story told with great sensitivity and humor, made even more enjoyable by Aaronovich's effortlessly beautiful prose and one of the most classic settings of all time.

As much fun as it is to read, however, a raging thriller TAP is not. The story itself is more about exploring relationships, large and small, and defining values than it is about running down corridors and saving the universe. There is a plot -- there are several, in fact -- developed just enough to make the book juicy, but keep the character moments possible.

The characters, both regulars and guests, are spot-on. Roz Forrester is, for the first time, a central figure in the story, and even allowed to interact with the Doctor. It's about time, too, because Roz is an interesting person in her own right. However, Aaronovich's real triumph is his handling of the Seventh Doctor. In TAP, the Doctor is not too harsh, not too gushy, but done just right. The Doctor's likability and accessibility are restored, as is his fundamental goodness -- reminding both the Doctor and the reader what he's all about.

There are many more wonderful things about this book: Aaronovich's visual style and ability to create scenes that simply beg to be filmed; his crafting of words, too, supplies no small number of passages that are meant to be savoured. There is also here a sense of family among the TARDIS crew that has been missing for some time: like any family they have their rows, but they also laugh together and appreciate one another. TAP is devilishly funny -- the kind of humor that stems from genuine situations and real people rather than parody or forced silliness. The People and the Also People are some of the best science-fiction ideas to come out of the New Adventures.

Basically, Aaronovich has provided an all-around laugh-and-cry feel-good read.

As befitting the quasi-vacation our heroes find themselves in, TAP is a time to relax, to catch your breath amidst death-defying adventures; although the job of saving the universe can never completely be put on the back burner.

SUMMARY

The Good: A book to which you can go back and re-read your favorite parts.

The Bad: Gratuitous Companion Romance -- how original. Unpredictable, even.

The Ugly: The implications of the Epilogue.
Profile Image for Steven Poore.
Author 22 books102 followers
April 5, 2021
One of my favourite Seventh Doctor adventures. Bernice Summerfield, Chris and Roz, a typically plate-spinning and furtive spymaster of a Doctor, and a ram-raid on the Culture universe of Iain M Banks. You really cannot go wrong. There's fan-service aplenty to both Culture and Who, references galore (including Kaldor), and a utopian Dyson Sphere civilisation so over the top that Aaronovitch can literally get away with anything as he makes the Tardis Team chase down a murderer while Benny weighs the life of a woman who is far more than she appears to be...

There are serious points made within on the nature of crime in a utopia and how such a place, devoid of official police forces, might deal with a murderer. And while the stakes don't necessarily encompass the whole universe, The People are still presented as the sort of danger it would be prudent to avoid antagonising.

If you can find a copy of this anywhere, I absolutely recommend it.
Profile Image for Finn.
227 reviews2 followers
February 9, 2021
It was okay.

The story is more or less solid, but occasionally too complex. Who needs unpronouncable names and interest groups cluttering up the pages... I sure don't but okay, that's what it is.

For the most part it's a whodunnit story where the suspects can be both humanoid and/or machine, with a side story of having a character from another story running around untamed.
Profile Image for Steven Alexander.
205 reviews1 follower
November 23, 2017
I came to this one with high expectations. I was so disappointed.

I class myself as a "big fan" of both Iain M Banks and Doctor Who, so this crossover with a Culture-inspired society (actually ripped wholesale with a few minor changes to the names) seemed appealing to me. Sadly, it failed to hold my interest. The Doctor, Bernice, Roz and Chris wander about a Dyson Sphere, meet some people at a party, have sex, get angsty about past adventures and generally faff about. About halfway through the plot starts up as they get involved in a murder-mystery, but sadly it's all solved with a bit of sci-fi flim-flam.

There are other problems, basically you've got little chance of following this one unless you've read the previous 9 or 10 books, because the focus is on the characters having a bit of down-time.

SPOILERS TO FOLLOW

There's also a girl on a beach who is a mindless huntress - turns out this is Kadiatu Lethbridge-Stewart, first introduced in Transit. She apparently became a time-travelling, mega-death causing ultra-being in a previous novel, but here she's catching fish. For reasons I couldn't follow she starts to get her memories back and everyone worries she's about to start on a hyper rampage and destroy all of time n'space, but fortunately she dances on a beach instead.

The Doctor stops a war between some Ships (hyper-intelligent spaceships) by talking to them in a scene we don't see. Also, he causes one of them to explode by doing something we don't see. He has set up Kadiatu on this planet by doing something we don't see. Roz somehow solves the mystery of the murdered drone using information we're not privvy to. One of the characters gets pregnant with Chris Cwej's baby but this doesn't seem to be resolved or have an impact on the characters.

It's like the important parts of the story have been deleted and replaced with long boring bits about a baker and her flying bread. There are so many sections that seem to be coming to a point or a climax, then they just stop and are never revisited. I don't find that to be clever writing, it's more confusing.

Also confusing were the character names. Top marks for giving us properly alien-seeming names, but take all those marks away again because the characters weren't strong enough to allow me to differentiate them. If they had (for example) been paired up with the main characters it would have been easier, you could have said "Ah this is a scene with Roz and Am!Xt!s'Qarvi!!" but they all wander about and bump into each other at random.

I didn't like the philosophical Just So story at the start and end of the book. I found it very Pretentious Hancock.

Iain M Banks tends to set his books on the edge of the Culture, or focus on a character from outside the Culture, because a story set on the inside with only Culture characters would be inherently dull. I guess we've got the regular TARDIS team here, but it just didn't kick into life for me.

There is a great bit where Benny and the Doctor get attacked by little sandworms on the beach. There's real threat to the characters and a clever solution that we can understand. If the rest of the novel had given us a bit more adventure and spice like that, I think I would have enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Danny Welch.
1,383 reviews
September 15, 2024
Ben Aaronovitch is no stranger to Doctor Who, after all, he wrote Remembrance of The Daleks and the underrated epic Battlefield. Transit was his first Doctor Who novel and unfortunately it was a disastrous mess of a story that was clunky, poorly put together, and didn't fit with the overall vibe of the range, it was one of the few stories that tried too hard at being adult and mature. The Also People on the other hand is a popular novel that people often regard as one of the best Doctor Who novels ever written. Fingers crossed this works out for me.

After their recent adventures, The Doctor decides to take his companions on vacation to The Worldsphere where the populace has a non-aggression pact with the Time Lords. But The Doctor has an agenda of his own for Kadiatu is here and she is in desperate need of help. This society is populated by many species and sentient machines that collectively call themselves 'The People'. It's a very relaxed society overlooked by a sentient machine called 'God', so when a murder is committed, the people and the intelligent machines are terrified and tensions begin to rise. This is going to be a holiday to remember.

Ben Aaronovitch has written a brilliant novel that was much needed in the Virgin New Adventures. Unlike Transit this is a fast-paced, easy-going novel that is fun, energetic, wholesome, and charming, but most of all imaginative. This book has fascinating world-building and a terrific cast of bizarre characters. The plot is thin in this story so the novel can focus on its characters and creative world-building.

This novel gives all the characters something to do. Roz Forrester gets some much-needed character development while giving us a better idea of who she is, what she stands for, and why.

Overall: This is a terrific book that is admittedly a tiny bit overrated because of how thin the plot is, but it's a creative novel that is wonderfully charming and hilarious. 9/10
Profile Image for E.H..
Author 8 books85 followers
February 5, 2020
This was a reread of a book I have read many times. In fact, I have read it so many times that my copy is falling apart, and page 65/66 has departed for a better place. This was my first time rereading this since my early 20s, and I have to say it was both what I remembered and not that.

The bad: Some of the stuff around the African women was a little weird (not really racist but kinda not cool by modern standards). The dialog in the scene where Roz confronts Feli!xi was like an old noir novel. The book fulfills several (bad) NA cliches, including "Chris sleeps with someone," "Benny gets drunk," "The Doctor is accused of manipulating people" (even though I didn't see it). There's also Dep, who decides she wants to have Chris's baby without consulting him about it. Which...what? And I have like half a dozen other petty complaints.

The good: I have rarely met an alien civilization that I quite so wanted to just wrap myself up and live in. And even with my eyes open to the novel's faults, I still feel that way. I like the Dyson sphere, I like the language with its weird pops and clicks, I like the technology, I like God, I like all the sentient machines... I like everything. Oh, and Kadiatu. Of all the characters from the NAs that I have been wanting to see in the new series, Kadiatu is the top of the list. Unfortunately, I think they "adapted" her into River Song, so that will probably not happen...but if the powers that be want to bring the Worldsphere to the screen, I am totally there for that.
Profile Image for Craig Andrews.
149 reviews
November 24, 2012
After reading the two new Big Finish Benny books on holiday I wanted to carry on with my slow but determined reading of the Doctor Who New Adventures which introduced Benny back in the 90's. Also People is known to be one of the better ones and it didn't disappoint. Benny was superb in it but so were Chris and Roz and of course, the Doctor. I really liked what they did with Kadiatu as well. She would have made a cracking companion. It's nice to see her and Benny reconnecting as she is also in one of the Benny audios set years later. I still haven't finished my re-read of the New Adventure Toy Soldiers as it didn't flow that well for me and I also skipped out Head Games although having just seen Mel in action with the 6th Doctor again I might go back to it.
Profile Image for Xanxa.
Author 22 books44 followers
May 16, 2025
This is one of those books where the world-building is better than the storyline. The story takes place in an idealistic society where humans co-exist peacefully (for the most part) alongside sentient machines which include anything from surveillance drones to food/drink dispensers, travel capsules, space-ships and sentient living spaces.

A vacation for the Doctor and his companions turns into a murder investigation. There seems to be no sense of urgency in tracking down the culprit. Indeed, the Doctor's companions spend a great deal of their time making friends and becoming intimate with them.

Even when the culprit is revealed, it's somewhat of an anti-climax. No, I didn't work out who it was in advance, but I didn't care enough to be bothered with working it out.
Profile Image for Wendy.
521 reviews17 followers
March 17, 2008
It's like Doctor Who meets Iain Banks's Culture. Definitely a must for any fan of both. Well-plotted, and gives us some great character moments for all of the TARDIS crew. It has a flaw common to many stories about the 7th Doctor in his master-manipulator guise - when the great climactic confrontation is over, I'm still not sure I understand really what the Doctor's great plan was. Still, this is up there with the best of the New Adventures range.
Profile Image for Daniel Kukwa.
4,741 reviews122 followers
January 13, 2011
A book in love with Doctor Who, its characters, and its joyous view of the universe. This novel is a Mozart-worthy opera to an era that seems so long ago, now...but was amazing while it lasted.
Profile Image for Jim Cleaveland.
Author 3 books1 follower
May 10, 2023
I'd give this book 3.5 stars if I could. The setting is fascinating, and the Seventh Doctor is written well. There isn't much of a plot, but I'm actually fine with science fiction and fantasy travelogue stories, usually. What bugged me about this is that all three companions with the Doctor on this adventure are from the future, and therefore are not that impressed or even surprised by all the alien tech on display here. Bernice and Roz seem to spend the whole book almost competing to see who can act the most blasé and jaded about this amazing place the Doctor has brought them to; and while Chris at least has the decency to think it's all pretty cool, he still treats it like a bunch of new toys rather than as anything inherently startling. What the story desperately needs is a contemporary (or earlier) Earth person to just occasionally be gobsmacked by all this amazing stuff; even if they were to react negatively to it, at least such a character wouldn't act jaded.

Midway through the book, we are (re)introduced to a character who had appeared previously in the novel series, apparently in a book I had not read, and Aaronovich never bothers with the necessary few sentences to tell the unitiated who the heck she is, how Bernice knows her, etc., despite the fact that much of the novel ends up revolving around this person.

So, it's one of those novels I'm glad I read for the ideas in it, but getting through it was kind of a slog for me because there's very little plot, and I just didn't find these particular characters in this setting to be engaging enough to sustain my interest without a strong plot.
Profile Image for Mikey.
61 reviews3 followers
July 23, 2020
A really nice change of pace for the New Adventures - things take a bit more of a leisurely approach as the Doctor + Co. take a holiday. At the same time, we get introduced to a really alien and interesting culture with the People, which I think so far just beats the Artifact from Parasite as the most out there and alien concept we’ve had in the New Adventures so far.

Character-wise it’s lovely to have a chance to take a breather and have some great stuff for all four regulars, especially giving some great well-needed focus to Roz. (Though the emphasis on her being a bit of a bigot to aliens is something that I hope gets properly moved away from sooner rather than later.). Chris’s subplot veers a bit off somewhere but he still gets some nice scenes throughout. Meanwhile, the Doctor and Benny are both on top form here, with some really great moments both separately and together where their relationship and thoughts about one another are really nicely explored.

There’s another returning face in here as part of the Doctor’s plans, but it’s here that I do feel that plot gets a bit lost, while the focus on the murder of vi!Cari is a lot more engaging with how it unravels.
1,857 reviews23 followers
July 15, 2025
Absolutely brilliant, provided you are open to the idea of a Doctor Who story which sets asides the tropes of adventure fiction more or less entirely in favour of telling a sort of sci-fi slice of life story with some weightier events gradually playing out over the span of the novel. Full review: https://fakegeekboy.wordpress.com/202...
Profile Image for Laura.
647 reviews1 follower
September 29, 2021
Probably some of the best world-building there's been in this series so far - the setting felt vivid and autonomous, and I love that; some of my favourite DW stories are similarly memorable. Not much else to say except I'm intrigued about the implications of the epilogue. Hopefully the series will remain up to standard as this plotline develops.
Profile Image for City Mist.
129 reviews
November 12, 2024
As a writer for Doctor Who proper, Ben Aaronovitch penned some of the most exciting stories of the Classic Series' late era renaissance, but his New Adventures always seem to be burdened by technobabble and leaden world building.
Profile Image for Michael.
1,074 reviews197 followers
January 23, 2025
Another story in dire need of an editor to trim a couple of story elements and rein in the writer's tendency to just add every little weird thing.
Profile Image for David Sarkies.
1,930 reviews383 followers
July 23, 2017
Doctor Who and the Dyson Sphere
20 February 2012

Question, what is the easiest way to double the price of a pretty ordinary book written in the 90s and turn it into a collectors edition? Do a limited print run. This is basically what they did with the Virgin New Doctor Who books. This book is now over 15 years old and when it was first released you could purchase it for $10.00 Australian dollars (and that was when the Aussie was worth 0.75 US cents) but I just checked the price of this book out on Amazon and for a brand new copy you will be forking out $30.00 US. Used copies start at $23.00 US, and this is not the most expensive. If you want a brand new copy of Just War, expect to be paying upwards of $60.00 US. Now, I don't mind paying top dollar of an antique book in good condition, but a pulp novel, I don't think so.

Anyway, this is one of the stranger Doctor Who books. They land up in what is called a Dyson Sphere. A Dyson Sphere is a sphere that surrounds a star and the inside of the sphere is inhabited by the population. I am not entirely sure how the theory is supposed to work since there will be no night and day within the sphere, and as I understand it, the night and day cycle is important because it keeps the planet cooled down. I believe Mercury is set in a fixed rotation so that one side is always facing the sun and the other side is always facing away from the sun, which means one side is blistering hot, while the other side is freezing cold. It is only a narrow patch between the two sides which is theoretically habitable (ignoring the fact that it is Mercury). Therefore one of the flaws that I see in the Dyson sphere is that the surface of the sphere is always facing the sun therefore there is no way for it to cool down and thus the entire surface is likely to end up burning out.

I first heard of the Dyson Sphere in one of the Rigby-Osbourne books on the future. These books were for children, and they were exploring some of the wonderful scientific postulations that could come about. No doubt the development of a Dyson Sphere would be thousands of years into the future and the race that develops it would by highly advance. This is the case in the Also People, particularly when we consider the blurb which suggests that they have a non-aggression pact with the Time Lords.

Now that is pretty much all I can remember from the book, with the exception of the funny names that they used (they attempted to create names using exclamation marks and the like, which in Kalahari, denotes a clicking sound – a friend from Zimbabwe told me that – gee, I know lots of people from lots of places). While the author may have found it clever, I did not, I found it somewhat confusing and annoying to reading, and in the end I simply skipped over the names, denoting them as this one or that one. Other than that, I can't say much more, and if you haven't read it yet and want to, well, it goes for $30.00 US on Amazon.
Profile Image for Nicholas Whyte.
5,343 reviews209 followers
April 8, 2009
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2144332.html[return][return]This New Adventure is an obvious tribute to Iain M. Banks: the People of the title are very similar to the Culture, a post-scarcity interstellar society with intelligent drone robots and spaceships. Banks himself had mixed feelings about the show. In 2008 he wrote that "some of the Doctor Who episodes over the last few years have been amongst the best SF ever to appear on TV or film and may well prove much more influential than anything I've ever written", but by the time of his last interview he had "fallen out of love" with it. Banks fans who are at least vaguely acquainted with Who will enjoy Aaronovitch's adaptation of the Culture to the Whoniverse; for Who fans, who are of course the primary audience, it's one more well-realised alien culture, with a bit more depth to it than is the norm. [return][return]Apart from the audacity of the setting, it's quite a good story. The Doctor and friends (two of his current companions being their time's equivalent of police officers) are asked to investigate the mysterious murder of a drone, and work through the suspects despite various distractions. Roz in particular gets some very good character development time, which she hadn't really had much in her previous five books. I was less happy about the sub-plot involving the Brigadier's descendant Kadiatu Lethbridge-Stewart and Bernice; the Seventh Doctor as manipulator doesn't always work for me. But it's a small element of an enjoyable whole.
Profile Image for Valentin.
98 reviews
January 24, 2015
‘Just how technologically advanced are they?’ The Doctor frowned. ‘Let me put it this way: they have a non-aggression pact with the Time Lords.’

The Doctor has taken his companions to paradise, or at least the clocest thing he can find. A sun enclosed by an artificial sphere where there is no want, poverty or violence.

While Chris learns to surf, meets a girl and falls in love with a biplane, Roz suspects an alien plot and Bernice considers that a Dyson Sphere needs an archaeologist like a fish needs a five-speed gear box.

Then the peace is shattered by murder. As the suspects proliferate, Bernice realises that even an artifical world has its buried secrets and Roz discovers what she’s always suspected -- that every paradise has its snake.

Profile Image for Sean Homrig.
88 reviews2 followers
January 29, 2014
Everything is here; an intriguing alien world, a compelling murder mystery. Yet there seems to be something missing between the lines. Other than the usual Time Team, the characters appear two-dimensional, but for the fact that many of them are fascinating sentient machines. The pieces have all been set up on the chess board perfectly (ha ha), but the resulting game loses it's glimmer after 150 pages. I stopped caring about the sentient ships or Chris' love affair. Instead, I found myself confused by the author's "epic" descriptions of places and beings that seemed too big for the plot. Much style, albeit some very good style (he knows how to write quite well, particularly for Benny), but not enough substance for this reader. And, for the record, it may have been because I saw the solution for the whodunit a mile away.
Profile Image for Kris.
1,359 reviews
August 15, 2021
A rather wonderful Virgin New Adventure, which for me marks the point where the Chris and Roz era finally comes into its own.

This works as a kind of inverse cabin scenario. Rather putting our team in a confined space under constant threat to allow us to explore their relationships, this gives them a massive open post-scarcity world with only occasional threats in order to allow them to explore themselves and let us into who they really are.

Yes parts of it are liberally cribbed from Banks culture novels but Doctor Who has always borrowed from the best and so this works well.
Profile Image for Mae R.
29 reviews5 followers
January 3, 2014
Probably the best New Adventure in the entire series. Great (and consistent!) character development and a vaguely entertaining plot which takes place on a fully realized world. Was it kind of an odd world? Yes. Did it make sense? Not always. But it was consistent within itself, and that was enough to suspend my disbelief. There are so few New Adventures authors who are able to do Roz any justice, and Ben Aaronovitch is definitely one of them. Overall, I've recommend this, along with all the other NA written by Aaronovitch.
Profile Image for Brad.
91 reviews9 followers
December 31, 2012
The story was good, and the world-building interesting (although it sounds like Aaronovitch borrowed heavily from Ian Banks, whose work I haven't read), but I found this one tough to get into and some of the plot lines didn't seem to lead anywhere at all.
Profile Image for Ms_prue.
470 reviews9 followers
September 15, 2015
The acronyms nearly killed me but I survived. Will need to re-read after reading previous novels in the series - it does stand alone but I want to read more of Roz and Chris and Kaidatu's back story.
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