The Doctor travels to Karagula to meet the fabled Darksmiths in a bid to outwit the Agent and get the crystal. Can the Doctor uncover the mystery of the childless village? Who is the travelling Dreams-Merchant? Is there a link with the Dark Cathedral of the Darksmiths? Will the Agent arrive and identify the Doctor to the Darksmiths? Find out by reading the third exciting instalment of "The Darksmith Legacy"!
Richard has written over forty books for children and began his writing career as an in-house author, working on non-fiction, first at Usborne Publishing, and later at Ladybird Books. Since going freelance, he has created original stories to support a wide range of exciting licensed properties such as Doctor Who; Wallace and Gromit; Transformers; MI High; Captain Scarlet and The Incredibles. Richard lives in Leicestershire with his wife and two young children. Richard's rather unfortunate surname comes from a village in South Yorkshire, where his ancestors lived. It means 'a dwelling with dried cow pats for roofing'.
This was pretty good! The last two books, along with this series of course, is aimed at young readers but they were written in such a simplistic way that no one watching Doctor Who would really enjoy. They over explain things. It's like being baby-talked. Not this book though! It has sci-fi-esque language that the Doctor uses frequently and while it explained things in a simple way, it's not way too simple that you'd lose interest. I enjoyed the plot and the characters. I know this is a one-off but I wish I can read about them again in a future series or something. Also, because this book is good, I might not be dropping this series.
Of the first three Darksmith Legacy books, this one was the slowest. However, this is not a series of books that is easy to review one by one, because I'm enjoying the series as a whole, but I didn't like this specific book. The information about the general plot is not as big as you may think, as the Darksmiths don't know that much about the crystal and the one Darksmith who does (the one who created the crystal), is missing.
The adventure of this book didn't have as much mystery as the ones of the previous two books. The kids of a group of people are missing, because a woman conned these people into giving them to her. It's also very easy to figure out what the woman did and why only one person didn't fall into her trap. While a child may find it much more mysterious, from the point of view of an adult, the only interesting part is that the Doctor uses his screwdriver as a pen drive to get information of a computer-like book that the Darksmiths haven't managed to open. We don't get to see what this information is in this book though, because the Doctor is busy rescuing the children.
After two mediocre adventures that didn't really get this 10 part saga started we are finally rewarded with an exciting story that takes us to the very roots of the "big picture".
Richard Dungworth writes well, with just the right kind of pacing and language to make this a compact and fascinating tale. This book makes you look forward to the following volumes much more eagerly than its predecessors.
A good read, though not quite as good as the previous two instalments in this Darksmiths series. The setting was evocative and the characters were good, it's just that the plot was a little slight in this volume.
Overall, however, the series continues to be impressive, with a good strain of gothic horror continuing to dominate proceedings.
What I thought: I remember liking this one a lot. Not sure why. I think the ideas and characters appealed to me in a way that they didn't in the first one.
A fantastic part 3 while not as action packed or full of horror and tension as the first two it does progress the plot on nicely and again the characters and location are well written. The Horror and action moments that this part does have are well thought out and definatly entertain.
Suitaable for 8 - 11 year olds. The Doctor finally meets the Darksmiths, and looks for missing children. Lots of running about again in this volume. Nothing special.