Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Destiny of the Doctor #1-11

Destiny of the Doctor: The Complete Series Box Set

Rate this book
For the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who, Big Finish Productions has produced a special range of audiobook titles, each focusing on one of the eleven Doctors.

These are dramatised readings, featuring stars from every era of the BBC series new and old alongside fresh new voices, and this box set contains all eleven adventures plus a bonus ‘making of’ disc.

Included:
1. Hunters of Earth by Nigel Robinson, read by Carole Ann Ford with Tam Williams
2. Shadow of Death by Simon Guerrier, read by Frazer Hines with Evie Dawnay
3. Vengeance of the Stones by Andrew Smith, read by Richard Franklin with Trevor Littledale
4. Babblesphere by Jonathan Morris, read by Lalla Ward with Roger Parrott
5. Smoke and Mirrors by Steve Lyons, read by Janet Fielding with Tim Beckmann
6. Trouble in Paradise by Nev Fountain, read by Nicola Bryant with Cameron Stewart
7. Shockwave by James Swallow, read by Sophie Aldred with Ian Brooker
8. Enemy Aliens by Alan Barnes, read by India Fisher with Michael Maloney
9. Night of the Whisper by Cavan Scott and Mark Wright, read by Nicholas Briggs with John Schwab
10. Death's Deal by Darren Jones, read by Catherine Tate with Duncan Wisbey
11. The Time Machine by Matt Fitton, read by Jenna Coleman with Michael Cochrane and Nicholas Briggs
12. Meeting Destiny - Making-Of Documentary

Audio CD

First published November 7, 2013

2 people are currently reading
38 people want to read

About the author

Nigel Robinson

85 books11 followers
Nigel Robinson is an English author, known for such works as the First Contact series. Nigel was born in Preston, Lancashire and attended St Thomas More school. Robinson's first published book was The Tolkien Quiz Book in 1981, co-written with Linda Wilson. This was followed by a series of three Doctor Who quiz books and a crossword book between 1981 and 1985. In the late 1980s he was the editor of Target Books' range of Doctor Who tie-ins and novelisations, also contributing to the range as a writer.

He later wrote an original Doctor Who novel, Timewyrm: Apocalypse, for the New Adventures series for Virgin Publishing, which had purchased Target in 1989 shortly after Robinson had left the company. He also wrote the New Adventure Birthright, published in 1993.

In the 1990s, Robinson wrote novelisations of episodes of The Tomorrow People, The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles and Baywatch and the film Free Willy. Between 1994 and 1995, he wrote a series of children's horror novels Remember Me..., All Shook Up, Dream Lover, Rave On, Bad Moon Rising, Symphony of Terror and Demon Brood.In 1996 he continued to write the Luke Cannon Show Jumping Mysteries series,containing four books, namely The Piebald Princess, The Chestnut Chase, The Black Mare of Devils Hill and the last in the series, Decision Day for the Dapple Grey. By 1997 he had also penned a trilogy science fiction novels First Contact, Second Nature and Third Degree.

His most recent work was another quiz book, this time to tie in with the film The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
11 (20%)
4 stars
27 (50%)
3 stars
12 (22%)
2 stars
1 (1%)
1 star
2 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Nicolas Lontel.
1,250 reviews92 followers
March 12, 2019
Dans l'ensemble, c'est une bonne anthologie (à part pour les histoire du troisième et quatrième docteur), l' "arc" joue un rôle très mineur donc il est parfaitement possible de n'en écouter que quelques-uns dans le lot. Pour une anthologie du 50ème anniversaire, je crois que le résultat est très satisfaisant et balance bien entre l'hommage et une narration bien indépendante.

Hunters of the Earth par Nigel Robinson
Enfin un audio qui donne vraiment un bon rôle à Susan qui non seulement explore son environnement scolaire, ses relations, ses envies et désirs, mais lui donne le champs libre pour résoudre une partie du problème, affirmer ses valeurs et la résolution du conflit à l'aide de celles-ci. L'audio adresse aussi des questions de racisme (surtout du racisme concernant l'immigration) bien qu'un peu en surface, et seulement comme ressort narratif. J'aurais aimé que ce ne soit pas si noir & blanc (et pas une question scientifique non plus qui justifie son amplification)
(spoiler:) la fin aussi était réussi, pour une fois, un homme qui a trahi la confiance de Susan ne se fait pas pardonner malgré ses excuses et Susan est non seulement capable de le réaliser, mais de mettre ses limites et réaliser le problème.

Shadow of Death par Simon Guerrier
Un épisode qui n'a absolument rien a se reprocher, de grande qualité narrative. Le Docteur, Jamie et Zoe arrive sur une planète où un groupe de scientifiques enquêtent sur une civilisation perdue autour d'un pulsar, mais d'étranges phénomènes temporels se manifestent et semblent poursuivre l'équipage humain. Guerrier amène aussi dans cet épisode quelques concepts scientifiques et joue un peu avec avant de les délaisser pour une narration plus fantastique.

Vengeance of the Stones par Andrew Smith
Moins mon genre d'histoire, très accès sur le côté militaire, pas des méchants très intéressants, on voit souvent la même chose (menace extraterrestre qui est amplifiée par l'agressivité humaine et (spoiler) destruction totale des extraterrestres à la fin).

Babblesphere par Jonathan Morris
Le Docteur et Romana arrive sur une planète où tout le monde à un implant qui le connecte à une Babblesphere (un espèce de Facebook obligatoire) et des gens connecté au réseau commencent à mourir. L'idée d'un groupe de vieilles femmes révolutionnaires est cool (mais pas nécessairement original), mais la raison derrière est disons... sexiste? Et en plus, on s'en débarasse au milieu de l'intrigue. De plus, les critiques du réseau sont assez simplistes et assez conservatrices à quelques égards. J'ai vu mieux disons.

Smoke and Mirrors par Steve Lyons
L'écriture est vraiment bien, j'ai été rapidement absorbé par la narration malgré une intrigue qui ne semble pas être si mystérieuse que ça dans les premières minutes. Bonne exploitation des différents traits des personnages pour faire avancer l'intrigue ou combler les différents moments de narration. J'ai assez rapidement deviné ce qui se tramait (peut-être y a-t-il trop de films/audio avec une intrigue autour de la magie pour que je commence à deviner ce qui veut être dissimulé), mais ça n'enlevait rien à l'histoire. Une histoire plutôt classique, bien racontée que j'ai apprécié écouter.

Trouble in Paradis par Nev Fountain
Un épisode audio certainement très étrange à plusieurs égards. Je vais essayer de rien spoiler, mais j'aime quand même bien la direction que ça prend, Peri a vraiment pas mal d'agentivité et est plutôt maîtresse de ce qui lui arrive (contrairement à la série), j'ai bien ri lorsqu'elle pense une certaine chose sur l'île alors qui lui arrive exactement le contraire (excellente exploitation du genre narratif et de connaissance des clichés), aussi, on ne prend pas Christophe Colomb avec le dos de la cuillère et ça donne parmi les bonnes scènes où Peri fait la leçon au Docteur plutôt que le contraire, certainement très cathartique.
Je tire de cet épisode que Nev Fountain connaît très bien ses lieux communs, les personnages et les méthodes de narration et arrive à très bien à nous surprendre en les utilisant à son avantage.
Nicola Bryant arrive à faire une excellente imitation du Onzième Docteur, j'ai adoré entendre ça.

Shockwave par James Swallow
Un peu trop prévisible à certains niveaux (y compris au niveau de la résolution) et certaines comparaisons/métaphores sont un peu trop communes, mais un audio correct. Les imitations de Sophie Aldred sont très bonnes.

Enemy Aliens par Alan Barnes
Après avoir reçu un message incomplet d'une future incarnation, le Docteur et Charley doivent combler les blancs et errent dans Londres à la recherche de réponses. Un bon épisode, on ne voit vraiment pas où il se dirige, beaucoup beaucoup de rebondissements. Probablement un qui pourra être intéressant à réécouter puisqu'il y a beaucoup d'éléments, mais qu'il n'est pas si marquant que ça non plus.

Night of the Whisper par Cavan Scott et Mark Wright
Ne pas avoir d'acteur ou d'actrice de cette période fait en sorte que cet audio doit embaucher un narrateur pour raconter l'histoire. Le choix de Nicholas Briggs n'était pas une mauvaise idée du tout, mais le fait qu'il tente d'imiter les accents du Neuvième Docteur (et du Onzième), de Rose Tyler ET du capitaine Jack Harckness est un peu beaucoup et sa seule très réussi est celle du Onzième. Il aurait peut-être été plus intéressant de simpler se contenter d'une narration (et peut-être d'un personnage de moins) plutôt que de tenter de les insérer dans la narration.
Sinon, l'épisode est un espèce de mélange d'un univers entre celui de Gotham City et un roman noir autour du Daily Planet , mais où le vigilante tue tous les "criminels" pour des crimes aussi banaux que de tagguer un mur. L'épisode ne m'a pas particulièrement interplé.

Death's Deal par Darren Jones
Un bon épisode se déroulant sur une planète où la faune et la flore semblent se liguer contre les explorateurs et où un message de détresse attirent le Docteur et Donna à la recherche de survivant·es. De bons retournements de situation, une bonne complexité, de l'humour. Un épisode que je réécouterais avec plaisir un autre jour. Catherine Tate assume très bien la narration et les imitations, on est vraiment plongé dans l'histoire.

The Time Machine par Matt Fitton
Paradoxes, boucles temporelles, évidemment que cet épisode en aurait! Le Docteur ainsi qu'un voyageur temporel du futur découvre un paradoxe et décident d'intervenir, cependant, cette intervention mène aux paradoxes et à la venue d'un espèce d'un autre univers qui se nourrit d'univers. Le Docteur est démuni face à cette invasion et le seul avenir possible pourrait bien ne qu'être que retarder la destruction de l'univers. Jenna Coleman raconte bien l'audio et Nicholas Briggs était presque méconnaissable! Je pensais que les personnages et objets des quêtes des épisodes précédents auraient toutefois jouer un rôle un peu plus important que les rapides mentions qu'on fait d'eux.
C'est évidemment un épisode qui parle de boucle et qui en fait lui-même de très nombreuses, autant au niveau allusif qu'au niveau intertextuel ou poétique. Les explications sont assez alambiquées pour un concept toutefois très clair, je ne comprend toutefois pas l'insistance autour de la protagoniste Alice et Alice aux pays des merveilles ou encore son refus de lire des histoires ou voir des films. Bref, j'ai encore quelques questions, pas sur l'épisode, mais sur certains choix stylistique.
Dans l'ensemble un bon épisode qui joue les lieux communs adéquat pour boucler la série.

Meeting Destiny (extras)
Les extras couvrent bien l'ensemble, souvent beaucoup plus axés sur les acteurs que les écrivains, mais le début était intéressant et plusieurs conseils d'acting en performance sonore sont mentionnés.
Profile Image for Sean.
Author 1 book1 follower
September 19, 2020
Hunters of Earth: A really strong story, especially to listen to now in the context of things like Black Lives Matter. It's a unique take on immigration with a Doctor Who twist.

Shadow of Death: This one is a bit dull. There are some nice moments, such as the scene where the Doctor receives a psychic message from the Eleventh Doctor and the Second Doctor remarks on their similarities, but I feel like more could have been done with it overall.

Vengeance of the Stones: It's an interesting idea to give Mike Yates a companion introduction story, but the narrative is weak compared to other Doctor Who stories (especially those from the Pertwee era). The pacing is a bit weird too.

Babblesphere: Easily the story that so far feels the most true to its era, despite social media having not been around in the 70s when those serials were aired. Features some very witty commentary on the dangers of social media, and fantastic narration from Lalla Ward.

Smokes and Mirrors: This was a great Fifth Doctor story, full of so many twists and turns. I really did NOT see that twist with Harry Houdini coming!

Trouble In Paradise: This is a great story where we finally get to hear the Doctor meet Christopher Columbus! There's some brilliant exploration of the Sixth Doctor & Peri's toxic relationship, and I like how it tackles the problematic side of Christopher Columbus.

It's a bit of a slow burner, but there's some genuinely captivating character moments captured in this audio. This is the Sixth Doctor and Peri story we should have got in the TV Series!

Shockwave: This is an absolutely fantastic Seventh Doctor and Ace story. It's basically like Doctor Who does a space disaster movie (so similar to Voyage of the Damned in that regard), and really does a good job of demonstrating this Doctor's more manipulative side.

Enemy Aliens: A solid if unremarkable Eighth Doctor story. A bit slow, with most of the story occurring in the last fifteen mins, but I like the ambiguity of the ending (which reminded me of the later TV ep Deep Breath), and the narration by India Fisher is brilliant.

Night of the Whisper: This audiobook story is a really strong and effective take on the superhero genre. It does a great job of capturing the essence of what a 'Doctor Who does superheroes' story looks like. Nicholas Briggs' Captain Jack impression is terrible though. He doesn't really do a very good job at capturing the character's essence.

Death’s Deal: I’ve listened to this one before, but I absolutely love it! I think it’s probably my favourite of the Destiny of the Doctor series. It’s such a fun and enjoyable adventure that fits right in to the tone of Series 4. It kind of feels like what a Doctor Who story written by Jules Verne would be like if he was still alive.

The Time Machine: This was a bit of a disappointing conclusion to the Destiny of the Doctor audio series. It has such a strong premise in the central plot of 'What if time travel existed in the then-Present Day of 2013?', but it doesn't feel like a conclusion to the overall story arc of the Doctor leaving messages to be picked up by himself in earlier incarnations. In fact, the messages are hand-waved away in the dialogue when the Doctor defeats the giant alien lizards of the story, the Creevix.

Jenna Coleman does a good job at reading the story, although strangely Clara Oswald is nowhere to be seen. It seems very odd to get Jenna Coleman to read this audio adventure, and yet not feature her companion anywhere in the narrative - especially when the other stories all have the respective companions of the different eras.

Taking away the lack of Clara and the underwhelming climax to the story arc, it's a decent story. It's nothing particularly remarkable compared to other Doctor Who adventures, but it's not terrible. It would just have been nice to have seen a tighter conclusion to the over-arching threads of this audio series.

Profile Image for Jamie Revell.
Author 5 books13 followers
March 19, 2018
This, in fact, is the edition that I bought. However, I have reviewed each of the episodes under their own entries, to keep the length of this review down to something sane. But here, I summarise my thoughts on the series as a whole.

It consists of eleven hour-long episodes, each featuring a different Doctor. All of the stories bar the last one are standalone, each having just one brief scene that ties into the plot arc and all of which get tied together (rather hurriedly, to be honest) at the end. It isn't, strictly speaking, necessary to listen to the first ten in order, and you won't lose too much from the final episode even if you've skipped a few up to that point - although the Doctor's story is particularly key to the surprise resolution.

Okay, so it's clear from my individual reviews that I mostly enjoyed the stories, and found that, by and large, each did a good job of reflecting their Doctor's era. Is it therefore, a good introduction to the first eight Doctors to those who have only seen the new series?

Well, it depends in part of what you think of the format. These are audiobooks, read in third person, but supplemented with sound effects, incidental music, and, for each episode, the relevant theme tune. It may be that, if you're a fan of regular audiobooks, you find the sound effects and music distracting and unnecessary. And, if you don't mind them, I suspect you'll probably prefer the regular audio plays, or even the "Chronicle" series (which use first person narration). The main down side of this series, I feel, is that the format falls between two camps and feels a bit odd as a result.

There's also the issue that not all the stories are as good as one might hope. Three and Six are a bit weak, Eight has a dodgy ending, and Ten feels a bit generic. (On the other hand, if you're a new series fan looking for an intro to earlier Doctors, Ten's episode is irrelevant for that, and Eight has nothing much on TV to introduce you to). Mostly, though, they are good, and even the weakest story, Six's, does at least reflect its TV era.

So, assuming you're okay with the format, I'd say it's not a bad introduction to the Doctors of the classic era. There are probably others that are better, for each Doctor individually, but this does have the advantage of being one whole thing that can be bought together.

And, to end on a positive note, in my opinion, the stories for Two and Nine are the best of the bunch, with Four not far behind. And, since they are (mostly) standalone, you could just try those.
Profile Image for Rhys Causon.
981 reviews2 followers
June 24, 2025
Individual stories would have a much higher individual rating but then stories like Babblesphere drag the overall rating down and despite stories like Night of the Whisper, Shadow of Death being interesting premises they don’t feel like they fully fit.

And the finale story, The Time Machine, felt rather complex even though it had been planted throughout the rest of the stories, whereas it could have easily just ridden the coattails of the other ten stories.

I do have to admire the way it had multiple writers working off each other to make the overall story flow. I cannot imagine that would have been an easy project at the time building up to the 50th Anniversary.

And I enjoyed the use of not so obviously loved companions for the older Doctors. Having only read a little about Mike Yates (but not enough to remember anything aside from his name) it was a surprise to hear a story with him. Then it became a little game of trying to figure out who the companion would be without looking it up first (and has opened up a whole arc I want to check out for the 8th Doctor).

Profile Image for Luke.
821 reviews40 followers
August 4, 2021
Overall it's great, a few stories here and there stop it from being a full, "fantastic" which i wish i could give it. The Overall arch is interesting, but i don't think you should read these books one after the other as it can get abit jaring! Sooo I'd recommend one or two, read a few other things and come back and read one or two more. The stand outs are the 4th doctor adventure, "babblespare" and 9 and 10s adventure, whos names currently escape me but just trust that they are amazing and definitely worth the box set alone!
Profile Image for Toby Sutton-Long.
162 reviews
October 15, 2023
These for the most part run of the mill Doctor Who stories, nothing hugely brilliant but there are some highlights. All can be enjoyed separately but together form a decent story.

"Good" stories - Hunters of Earth, Babblesphere, Shockwave, Enemy Aliens, The Time Machine.

"Medium" stories - Smoke and Mirrors, Trouble in Paradise, Night of the Whisper, Death's Deal.

"Bad" stories - Shadow of Death, Vengeance of the Stones.
Profile Image for Mel .
64 reviews1 follower
January 28, 2024
While this was 11 separate stories they all share a thread connecting them. I have not interacted much with Classic Who other than some serials from 3, 4 and 7. But I found this all very easy to digest and enjoy.

The only narration I struggled with was Catherine Tate. I felt like her portrayal of 10 just sounded too much like Donna (probably for the very good reason of Catherine Tate doing the voice).

The link between all 11 stories is fun and imaginative and really worked as one of those moments of the Doctor just being so far ahead of everyone else.
Profile Image for Rick.
3,123 reviews
August 14, 2020
I wish I could have found enough in here to give this a higher rating. There are some truly wonderful performances and some really interesting stories, but as it is in effect an anthology (yes, the stories are linked, but those links are tenuous at best) the result is a bit uneven. Still entertaining and fun, but not the greatest thing Big Finish has produced.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.