Now, I can see what Tade Thompson was trying to do here, and I can clearly see he put a lot of passion into this work, so I have respect for him from a literary standpoint because he is evidently a good author.
However, looking at this book through a Doctor Who lens, it feels like a mishmash of shallow concepts that don't work well together. The 'Anthophillae' aliens feel scraped from the very bottom of the creativity barrel, Fela Kuti's role in the story feels very generic and forced, and the book's whole premise of Sarah Jane losing her memories is literally ditched by the second chapter.
The characterization is all off as well. Half of the characters feel one dimensional while the other half don't feel anything like their on-screen selves. The book's original character, Doreen, feels more like a gender-swapped self insert than a proper UNIT soldier, and even Fela Kuti is used more to provide irrelevant context than to actually do anything useful in the story.
It's slightly disappointing since this was the first Icons book to feature a classic Doctor, and it was also delayed several months, so I had high hopes and anticipation for it, which I don't think were worth it in hindsight.
Why Puffin has chosen to keep this weak range of novellas going but to cancel their superior Crossovers range, I have no idea.
It's a shame because, as I said, there's clearly a lot of love from Thompson put into this, but I think there are just too many contradictory plot points going against its enjoyment factor.