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‘Someone is tampering with the fabric of the human cell,’ the Doctor said darkly, ‘perverting its secrets to his own dark purposes.’

Sarah Jane wants to meet her fellow journalist Rudyard Kipling, and the Doctor sets the co-ordinates for England, Earth, in the Victorian Age. As usual, the TARDIS materializes in not quite the right place, and the time travellers find themselves pursued across Devon moorland by a huge feral hound.

Children have gone missing; at the local boarding school, the young Rudyard Kipling has set up search parties. Lights have been seen beneath the waters of the bay, and fishermen have been pulled from their boats and mutilated. Graves have been robbed of their corpses. Something is going on, and Arthur Conan Doyle, the ship’s doctor from a recently berthed arctic whaler, is determined to investigate.

The Doctor and Doyle join forces to uncover a macabre scheme to interfere with human evolution - and both Sarah Jane and Kipling face a terrifying transmogrification.

261 pages, Paperback

First published September 15, 1994

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287 people want to read

About the author

John Peel

422 books166 followers
John Peel is the author of Doctor Who books and comic strips. Notably, he wrote the first original Doctor Who novel, Timewyrm: Genesys, to launch the Virgin New Adventures line. In the early 1990s he was commissioned by Target Books to write novelisations of several key Terry Nation Dalek stories of the 1960s after the rights were finally worked out. He later wrote several more original Daleks novels.

He has the distinction of being one of only three authors credited on a Target novelisation who had not either written a story for the TV series or been a part of the production team (the others were Nigel Robinson and Alison Bingeman).

Outside of Doctor Who, Peel has also written novels for the Star Trek franchise. Under the pseudonym "John Vincent", he wrote novelisations based upon episodes of the 1990s TV series James Bond Jr..

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Ken.
2,562 reviews1,375 followers
December 1, 2018
The Doctor and Sarah Jane had hoped to meet Rudyard Kipling in India, instead the TARDIS takes them to Dartmouth Moors.
Children have gone missing and a young Kipling has set up search parties.
Whilst their the TARDIS crew also met a certain Conan Doyle.

Just like the new series, this adventure heavily implies that The Doctor gave a famous writer the inspiration for their most well known pieces of fiction.
With a strange beast stalking the Devon moorland!

Along with hints towards The Hounds of the Baskervilles, there’s plenty of Holmes Easter Eggs scattered through the book.
Of course The Doctor is wearing a dear stalker hat again!

I’d only read Peel’s Dalek novels, so it made a nice change that this had a different villain.
The story was fasted paced, a great historical romp!
Profile Image for Kerry.
1,577 reviews117 followers
December 10, 2018
My only previous experience with Doctor Who writing by John Peel was the two Dalek books he wrote for the Eighth Doctor Adventures range back in the late '90s and I felt they were - to put it mildly - awful.

This one was chosen as the December read for the All New Doctor Who Book Club and it was sitting on my shelf, so I decided to read along.

It's a Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane story, where they find strange creatures lurking on the moors and in the sea. There's a potentially dodgy philanthropic millionaire, a country squire who many or may not be on the level, a peculiar visitor with a most disturbing manservant and, oh yes, Rudyard Kipling and Arthur Conan Doyle.

There are moments when the things about Peel's writing that annoyed me popped up - mainly in terms of clumsy shout outs of obscure Doctor Who lore or a clunky line that was in there because the author wanted it rather than the story needed it. But having said that, for most of the story, John Peel got it right. He created an interesting story that was mostly well written and easily kept my attention through to the end. There were moments when I could hear Tom Baker's or Elisabeth Sladen's voice in my head, speaking the lines Peel had written for them, and my brain doesn't do that for me often.

So I have to admit I was biased due to those awful Dalek novels, but I'll be much more willing to give Peel another go in the future and make my judgements on the work I'm reading, not the ones I've read in the past.
Profile Image for Mark.
1,272 reviews147 followers
July 26, 2025
I have read well over a dozen Doctor Who novels at this point, and the more of them I read the more I realize that my enjoyment of them hinges on the author’s ability to successfully match the characterization of the Doctor and his companions with their portrayal in the series. While other elements will define whether it is a good book or not, even the best of them proves lacking if they writer or writers cannot capture the voices and personalities of the Doctor and his companions as they were depicted in the show. Simply put, as I’m reading it, can I close my eyes and imagine it as another serial in the season in which it ostensibly takes place? Without that, the novel feels false as a Doctor Who property, lacking as it does the element that made me pick up a copy in the first place.

In this respect John Peel’s contribution to Virgin’s Missing Adventures series succeeds admirably. In it, the Doctor agrees to take Sarah Jane Smith to meet Rudyard Kipling, her favorite author. Only instead of sipping gin-and-tonics with the author on a verandah in Lahore in 1889 as promised, Sarah finds that the TARDIS has transported the two of them to Devon just a decade earlier, where Kipling was not a budding writer but a teenager at a boarding school. Nor is this the only problem they face, as upon exiting the TARDIS they are greeted by a massive canine-like figure that is being pursued by a party of hunters. The two of them are soon immersed in the investigation of this anomaly, which soon encompasses a murdered sailor, a mysterious individual and his unlikely manservant, and a businessman who seems on the cutting edge of communications yet is unknown to history.

Peel does an effective job of weaving the historical elements of his tale into a Doctor Who story. Among these is Arthur Conan Doyle, and the restraint the author exercises in incorporating the Sherlock Holmes references is impressive, as they never threaten to detract from the plot. There is also a part of the plot that foreshadows the later introduction of Torchwood into the franchise, for which Peel deserves some credit. But it is the depiction of the Doctor and Sarah that matters most, and he captures their banter quite effectively. While he might have employed Sarah’s feminism to better effect in her interactions with a teenaged Kipling and his chums, the novel overall is an effective depiction of the sort of Fourth Doctor adventure that fans have long enjoyed.
Profile Image for David Sarkies.
1,930 reviews383 followers
March 11, 2015
The Doctor plays at being Sherlock Holmes
24 January 2012

I cannot really remember where I first picked up this book - I believe that it was a second-hand book shop. It did catch my attention as it featured what one could consider to be the classic Doctor Who and his companion: Tom Baker and Sarah Jane Smith. It has been a while since I read this book, but the fact that I did come back to the Doctor Who books (not so much the novelisations, of which my brother has a quite a few, but rather these later non-novelisations. I would suggest that the novelisations were targeted at a much younger audience, and was to assist them in developing their reading skills) in that I read a couple, moved on to other books, and then at the suggestion of my friend Paul, returned to them and ending up reading quite a lot more.

This story is set between the Brain of Morbious and the Seeds of Doom (which was one of those stories that I simply loved) and it has been suggested that the author actually captures the essence of this period in his novel, and though it has been a while since I have seen it, I am inclined to agree. Sarah-Jane decides that she wishes to meet her hero, the journalist Rudyard Kipling, however, as usual, the TARDIS overshoots its mark and drops the Doctor and Sarah-Jane into the middle of an English moor where they are pursued by hounds, and then meet up with Kipling at a boarding school where he is organising a search party to look for some missing friends.

As well as Kipling, they also meet up with a young Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (and while the Doctor's outfit, as seen on the cover of the book, could be argued as being the inspiration for Sherlock Holmes, my experience of Holmes is that he actually never wore that tweed cap) and with these two famous figures of the past, go out on an adventure to discover the mystery of the moors. Personally, while I have not yet read the book, it does sound a bit like the Hounds of the Baskervilles, namely the opening scene with the English Moors and the wild dogs. This is not necessarily a bad thing though because many writers will borrow from classic stories as an inspiration for their current works, and I feel that doing such a thing makes for a better story than simply following a cookie cutter format.

As can be expected from Doctor Who, the mystery turns out to be a crashed spaceship (though I question how a spaceship could crash in London's West End without drawing the attention of the entire city, but that is besides the point) where a mad scientist is attempting to manipulate human evolution and create a horde of monsters (as you do). This does not seem to be a typical Doyle plot (and I suggest that because Doyle is a main character) as the Sherlock Holmes books tended to involve reason and logic, and while there are mysteries, they tend to always have sound scientific reasoning behind them. Sherlock Holmes does not deal with the supernatural, but rather the unusual and the odd (such as jilted lovers and lost hats). That still does not mean that what was done in this book was necessarily bad, one of the aspects of Doctor Who is meeting up with these people of the past, though I do not remember too much of that in many of the television series.
Profile Image for France-Andrée.
687 reviews26 followers
April 20, 2013
I enjoyed this. It was fun to meet Arthur Conan Doyle and Rudyard Kipling and see how the author of this DW book imagined them to be. I really liked the idea of mixing human and animal together that reminded me of The Island of Doctor Moreau. Good happy ending.
Profile Image for Kris.
1,359 reviews
April 17, 2019
Well not as bad Timewyrn Genesys. Though not significantly better. Largely the 4th Doctor hanging out with Arthur Conan Doyle to do a Hound of the Baskervilles pastiche whilst Sarah pointlessly hangs out with a creepy teenage Rudyard Kipling. In no way really interesting.
Profile Image for PJ.
159 reviews7 followers
October 1, 2025
Doctor Who: Evolution by John Peel is a Victorian-era sci-fi mystery that pairs the Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith in a chilling, Sherlockian adventure. Set in the English countryside, the story begins with Sarah wanting to meet her fellow journalist Rudyard Kipling (yes, that Rudyard Kipling), but things quickly take a dark turn. Missing children, mutilated bodies, grave robberies, and a feral hound terrorizing the moors all the classic Gothic vibes set the stage for the Doctor and Sarah to uncover a sinister plot involving human evolution. Oh, and Arthur Conan Doyle is along for the ride as a ship’s surgeon, adding a literary twist to the chaos.

The atmosphere is spot-on, capturing the eerie, fog-drenched vibe of Victorian England. Peel leans hard into Gothic tropes, with plenty of creepy science experiments, ominous moors, and shadowy villains. The nods to The Hound of the Baskervilles are plentiful, giving the book a fun, Holmesian flavor that fits the Fourth Doctor’s eccentric personality.

The Doctor and Sarah’s dynamic is as sharp as ever. The Fourth Doctor’s mix of whimsy and gravitas works beautifully here, especially in a setting that lets him play detective. Sarah is resourceful and witty, holding her own against both the Doctor and the many dangers they face. Their banter and teamwork remain a highlight, as always.

The plot itself is engaging but occasionally bogged down by exposition. Peel’s exploration of human evolution and tampering with biology is intriguing, though it sometimes veers into overly technical territory. The addition of Rudyard Kipling and Arthur Conan Doyle is fun, but their roles can feel a bit gimmicky at times like they’re there more for novelty than necessity.

If you’re into classic Gothic horror with a sci-fi twist and love the Fourth Doctor’s era, Evolution delivers a solid, atmospheric adventure. It plays like a mix of Doctor Who and Victorian detective fiction, with creepy science and literary cameos adding flair. While it doesn’t reinvent the wheel, it’s a satisfying Missing Adventure that fans of the era will enjoy.

A spooky, clever romp with strong vibes and memorable characters, though it can feel a tad overstuffed.
Profile Image for Steven Clark.
Author 19 books4 followers
February 6, 2017
Ah, yes, Dr. Who. I watched the show way back in the Tim Baker era, and read one of the novels then, whose title I forgot but was enjoyable. I'd just read an unsatisfying novel, and immediately go to one that's good, and Evolution, which I rescued from a used book bin, is a delight. I love the story and Peel's writing. It's clear, fun, fast moving, and I'm into the world and characters, all of whom are well-written. None of the prose is wasted, and two or three sentences sets the scene. The Doctor and Sarah Jane make a good team, and I enjoy how they are equally matched. It's mostly her POV, and she's always on target. The science and its plot elements are strong, as is the atmosphere. As a reviewer noted, there's a lot of good dialogue, and this is a Dr. Who I like better than the TV series…no aliens or goopy monsters and aliens, but a period story. The insertion of Kipling and Alice Bridewell is splendid, and I found the children very touching and poignant. It had a nice, crisp, ending.
Very good pleasure reading. Book me a ticket on the TARDIS.
Profile Image for Saoki.
361 reviews1 follower
September 29, 2019
This feels like a good book to hand to someone that has only ever watched the new Doctor Who series, as it is a the-Doctor-plays-Sherlock-Holmes adventure, filled with fun, weirdness and Nice Hats (it is, after all, a period piece).

It doesn't spoils anything to say that the story is a play on The Hound of the Baskervilles, since anyone familiar with the Conan Doyle story will realize that within the first few pages and someone unfamiliar with it won't have anything about The Hound actually spoiled (that's Doctor Who magic for you), but it is done in such a careful and loving way that I can only assume the writer researched carefully not only the 4th Doctor's character, but also Conan Doyle's stories and their historical setting. Everything is perfectly placed. Also, Sarah Jane is specially magnificent, but I might just be biased.
Profile Image for Harry.
58 reviews3 followers
January 8, 2025
A throughly enjoyable Missing Adventure. Having read John Peel’s EDA War of the Daleks, this book Evolution was vastly superior. A much more enjoyable story with great characters, great plot and brilliant portrayals of the Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith.

Definitely recommend this one for any fourth Doctor fan and especially if you like Arthur Conan Doyle. Definitely a book I’d like to re visit in the future! One of the shorter Doctor Who books but it rattled along at a great pace and has plenty of things to keep you engaged throughout.
1,857 reviews23 followers
October 21, 2024
I had low expectations going into this, having read Peel's uncomfortably horny entry in the Timewyrm series that kicked off the New Adventures line, and lo and behold he somehow failed to even hit that low bar. Full review: https://fakegeekboy.wordpress.com/202...
Profile Image for Andrew Beasley.
Author 11 books21 followers
September 5, 2017
Just read this on holiday by the pool.
Always have a Doctor Who book as part of my holiday reading...the 4th Doctor and Sarah Jane, like going away with old friends.
An enjoyable yomp with the Doctor doing his Sherlock Holmes impression ably assisted by the young Conan Doyle.
Profile Image for Laura.
647 reviews1 follower
August 16, 2020
Honestly I don't have much to say about this one. I think it's a perfectly serviceable Doctor Who story, but at the same time I don't have all that much affection for the era of the show it's set in, and maybe if I did I'd like it a bit more.
Profile Image for Matthew Kresal.
Author 36 books49 followers
December 21, 2011
Conventional wisdom amongst Doctor Who fandom is that John Peel’s non-novelization Doctor Who novels were nothing but continuity fests of middling quality. That is certainly true of his sole Virgin New Adventure Timewyrm Genesys and his Dalak novels for the BBC’s Eighth Doctor Adventures. Yet, either to prove it wrong or be the exception to the rule is Peel’s 1994 Virgin Missing Adventure Evolution. Setting Evolution between The Brain Of Morbius and The Seeds Of Doom, peel crafts a story that is utterly believable as a tale from the thirteenth season of original Doctor Who.

In reading Peel’s other Who novels, it was clear he really wanted to write for the fourth Doctor and here he gets his chance. Peel perfectly captures the fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith (both of whom make their novel debuts here). It is clear that Peel studied them both from the fourth Doctor’s speech at the bottom of page 149 to Sarah’s reactions to a group of teenage boys who reoccur throughout the novel for example. The dialogue and mannerisms throughout is spot on as well, giving the novel a strong air of authenticity as a season thirteen tale. In fact, Peel does something here that he never did again: he captured the right TARDIS crew for the right story.

The supporting character’s hold up well for the most part as well. A young Arthur Conan Doyle is a major supporting character in the story and, whether by accident or design, comes across a Harry Sullivan type to the point that some of the dialogue sounds as though actor Ian Marter could be saying the very line in some alternate universe TV version of the story. Whether that is a good thing or a bad thing is for the reader to judge but I judge it to be a good thing as it is A) great fun and B) helps to add to the authentic atmosphere of the novel. Helping to the novel the atmosphere of a Robert Holmes script are the various Victorian supporting characters from Colonel Ross, his “manservant” Abercrombie, Sir Edward Fulbright and the various children who appear in the story. That isn’t to say their perfect as both the villains and a group of teenagers (who become reoccurring characters) come across as being rather one dimensional, which is a shame. The various supporting character’s overall are good ones and help the novel rather than hinder as in the case of some of Peel’s other Who novels.

The novel’s plot seems perfectly suited to season thirteen and the Robert Holmes scripted stories of that season. Indeed the plot usage of strange creatures in and around Dartmoor also brings up the famous Sherlock Holmes story The Hound Of The Baskervilles, a piece of literature from the era Doctor Who was drawing inspiration from on TV. Indeed, both that era and the novel invoke strong memories of both Pyramids Of Mars from the previous season and The Talons of Weng-Chiang as well. While some aspects of the novel, such as its water set pieces and its finale, are hard to imagine being done on the show’s 1976-77 budget, there is a strong feeling of authenticity to the novel’s plot as being one that could easily have been from the era in question.

Being a John Peel novel, one would expect continuity and there indeed is some.Peel gets a bit of continuity in costume wise as the Doctor gets the costume he wears later in The Talons of Weng-Chiang and Sarah wears her costume from Pyramids Of Mars as well but these are throwaway references. Perhaps a bigger piece of continuity comes towards the end of the novel with a piece of backstory being tied into the crash of a spacecraft in London’s West End. Peel also manages to slip scenes in involving the TARDIS swimming pool as well as references to the recent (for the Doctor and Sarah Jane) events of The Brain Of Morbius. Compared to some of Peel’s other novels, these are largely throwaway and perhaps most shockingly Peel works them into the plot of the novel rather than tacking them on. It’s as good as you’re likely to see Peel in the continuity department.

As part of the Virgin Missing Adventures range, Evolution does what it says on the box. From its excellent characterization of the fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith, its Robert Holmes inspired supporting cast and its overall plot it has a feeling as if it could have been ripped from the era it is set in. In regards to John Peel’s oft- ridiculed use of continuity, you’re unlikely to find him use it better than he does here. While there isn’t anything groundbreaking to say about it, if you are after a pastiche of one of TV Doctor Who’s best eras then you can do no wrong by reading Evolution. In fact, it may well be Peel’s best non-novelization Who novel.
Profile Image for Ianto Williams.
83 reviews
March 6, 2017
Wow, don't think this book could have been better if it had tried, PERFECT! Loved it, especially Arthur Conan Doyle, very clever!
Profile Image for Jacqueline.
481 reviews18 followers
June 18, 2016
Doctor Who Evolution is part of the Doctor Who The Missing Adventures published by Virgin Publishing, it features the Fourth Doctor as played by Tom Baker and Sarah Jane Smith as played by Elisabeth Sladen. And it's a very fun read. The only reason it took me so long to read the book is my e-book didn't have flowable type (at least in the first e-reader I tried) - since the print was incredibly small, and attempting to enlarge it meant I had to scan horizontally across the typeface - I found it to be physically exhausting and irritating. I finally tried reading the book in Adobe Reader and then I could get the print to a reasonable size without having to scan back and forth on each line. Some of the lines double-printed, though, with the type over-lapping, so I had to go back to other e-reader and squint to read the type then go back -- that was exhausting. Publishers CHECK YOUR COPY! And don't assume everyone can read micro-sized 6-point type! OK, rant over.
The story itself was a fun romp. Sarah is exploring the TARDIS, checking out the wardrobe, then the swimming pool, but she eventually gets bored. She goes to the Doctor who asks her if there's someone she wants to meet - and Sarah says, yes, Rudyard Kipling.
The TARDIS then arrives in Victorian Devon - where a horrific giant hound is haunting the moor, and a fisherman's been killed by some extra-ordinary creature, and Sarah meets Kipling - but he's a schoolboy. She and the Doctor also meet Arthur Conan Doyle, not yet "Sir", who's just finished a tour as a doctor on a whaling ship - that's also pulled into the port in Devon. Yes, this story is as fun as you might expect. The Doctor and Sarah are quickly caught into events because several local schoolboys and street children have disappeared, and Kipling and a couple of his friends are trying to find them.
The plot involves a scientist who's lived in his older brother's shadow his entire life and has a terrible inferiority complex who's determined to prove he's smarter than his brother - and a deluded industrialist, who thinks he's on the side of progress - but actually he's promoting slavery and lack of self-will and self-determination. The arguments of the scientist and industrialist to defend what they are doing are fascinating. Totally wrong and awful - but fascinating none the less.
I really enjoyed this book. The first half, as the Doctor and Sarah meet all the locals in the small village - the lord at the manor, his daughter, her fiancé, Conan Doyle, the local doctor (Dr. Martinson), Kipling and his friends, a local boy from the village, the local fishermen, the whaling boat captain, etc and find out about the mysterious hound on the moor is just plain fun. The second part, as it becomes clearer and clearer just what is going on is also pretty cool. It should be horrifying but it's not really, it was just very, very neat. And I loved the end!
Highly recommended, especially to classic era Doctor Who fans!
Profile Image for Pietro Rossi.
247 reviews1 follower
February 6, 2022
Dressed in Cape-coat and deerstalker, the Doctor and Sarah land in Victorian Britain and get embroiled in a mystery. He's accompanied by a young doctor, Arthur Conan Doyle, who has dreams of being an author.

It's fascinating watching the Doctor act in a Holmesian fashion and (so we deduce) how the mannerisms are retained by Doyle for future reference. Equally for resourceful Sarah, the friend that would (again we deduce) help to shape Dr Watson, along with Doyle's tagging along with the Doctor. We even meet ragamuffins who are able to spy-out, led by Billy. Again, author John Peel takes these from the Holmes universe and skilfully transplants them here; whilst within the book, Conan Doyle will take these elements from his experience and eventually transplant them to his famous detective.

From a nerdy point of view(1), this book asks, if you wish to go down that road, Who created Sherlock Holmes? Was it Conan Doyle with the Doctor freely copying, or was it the Doctor who Conan Doyle freely copied from? Ultimately, Conan Doyle did come up with the Speckled Band, Red Headed League, the Solitary Cyclist et al independently of this adventure.

And the literary icons don't stop there as Sarah spends a lot of her time with 15 year old Rudyard Kipling, investigating what is at first a separate mystery on missing children.

The gothic atmosphere that runs throughout the book is very good, and Peel's writing engaging. I was curious about the mysteries and I read the book at pace, thoroughly recommending it. Despite the appearances of Kipling and Doyle, this is a science fiction book, with shades of Dr Moreau. It also has a very subtle, but noticeable, link to the TV story Horror of Fang Rock.

The various strands at the beginning do come together at the conclusion when the plot's revealed, and a good plot it is too. Very satisfying.

From a nerdy point of view(2), this book clearly implies that Conan Doyle will go on to write Holmes (who'd be fictional), yet this same publishing company would publish a seventh Doctor book where the Doctor meets Holmes and Watson. How do they square that, does anyone know?

From a nerdy point of view(3),I believe this (probably) influences Conan Doyle Professor Challenger series, but I've not read them, so I guess I'm missing out on some very clever clues and hints.

I do have problems with scoring this book though. As I hope you can tell from the above, I loved it. However, it never felt like a Dr Who book. I never had Tom Baker or Elizabeth Sladen in my head when their characters spoke or acted, especially where Sarah's about to be mutilated her reaction felt more like Ace or Leela.

On reflection, I guess the overriding factor should be, as I enjoyed it, I'd rate it as 8/10

Scoring: 0 absolutely rubbish; 1-3 poor; 4-6 average; 7-9 good; 10 excellent.
Profile Image for Andrew.
140 reviews48 followers
May 27, 2014
Thoughts:

+ Dialogue in this book is fantastic. Some really funny and smart lines:

Kipling: "What are you a Doctor of?"
The Doctor: "This and that. That and this. Mostly that."

The Doctor: He peered at Ross. "Ah, you must be the mad scientist, I assume"".

The Doctor: 'When have I ever let you down?'
Sarah: 'Too many times.'
The Doctor: 'That was in the past. And we've definitely passed through those times.'

+ Also of note is Peel's characterisation of the Doctor and Sarah Jane, which he gets to a tee. The brilliant chemistry between them two during Baker's early years is captured extremely well in this book, and the humour between them as well.

+ I think the ideas of this book are brilliant. The images of shark-like seals, mer-children, and monstrous hounds make for some great visual imagery for your head, giving it a really unique feel Also, the plot of animal-hybridisation using an alien substance is particularly interesting and disturbing.

+ The additions of Kipling and Conan Doyle are a nice touch. Not really needed, and the story would have worked fine even if they weren't there, but it's good that Peel manages to ground the story to some sense of reality.

- Have to say though, although most of the characters involved are expertly written, some of the characterisation is a tad weak. The villains particular suffer abit from this. Percival Ross falls into the "mad scientists will create a new world for his creations" cliché, and Breckenridge falls into "oh-so polite magnificent bastard" type villain. Although these are small and hardly dent the overall quality of the book, they are slightly disappointing.

+ Period setting is used well, and the book does actually use it to good use. Talk of the progress of industrial technology, as well as using on the tropes of Gothic horror (hound on the moors, which is implied to be the inspiration to Doyle's Hound of the Baskervilles).

Overall, this book is a "good yarn" as my dad used to say, but nothing more than that. It's hardly the most intellectual, challenging or ground-breaking Doctor Who book ever written, but it works on it's own as a neat little, exciting romp.
Profile Image for Christian Petrie.
253 reviews2 followers
February 9, 2019
Once again a Missing Adventure surprises me on a second read. When this first came out, I thought it was okay. Nothing too exciting. This time around I was impressed with it.

First off this book goes by fast. The writing is not too heavy and the character descriptions are not too detailed. At the same time you can imagine the setting. Due to other British shows covering the time period it is easy to imagine the manor and the land around it. The village and the village tavern.

The other aspect of the writing is the characters. The secondary characters are fleshed out to bring life to them. Both the Doctor and Sarah descriptions and actions capture the feel of their time together.

The other aspect of this novel is it also feels like a Sherlock Holmes story. This is due to how the Doctor interacts with Arthur Conan Doyle. Here Peel writes their relationship to Holmes and Watson. Thus laying the influence of The Doctor with the Sherlock Holmes stories.

In the end this book feels that it could have been an adventure on TV during Season 13. It was great fun to read and was very satisfying. Another book Doctor Who fans should track down and read.

[Minor Spoiler] One other item is there is a hint of Torchwood in this story. Granted this was written 12 years before Tooth and Claw, however due to that episode you can't get the feeling that one of the characthers could be working for Torchwood in the early days.
636 reviews10 followers
January 4, 2016
"Evolution" by long-time fan John Peel has the elements that Peel does well, namely recreating the mood and atmosphere of a particular TV season. In this case, we get Doctor 4 and Sarah, perhaps the best Doctor/companion couple in the regular series. The mood exactly imitates the Gothic period Who, from "Pyramids Of Mars" to "Image Of The Fendahl." The Doctor tries to fulfill a promise to Sarah by taking her to visit her favorite writer, Rudyard Kipling (a bit too conservative for Sarah's tastes, perhaps? - just my opinion), but gets it a little wrong and arrives in England while Kipling is still a teenager. There is great fun as "Gigger" (Kipling's nickname because of his famous gig-lens glasses) develops a teen-crush on Sarah. There is plenty of dark mood, as well. Most of the action happens at night. Grave robbing, gruesome deaths, and mysterious man-monsters add that Gothic feel. Among other prominent historically real characters, Arthur Conan Doyle features quite prominently, here a young ship's doctor. Peel cannot resist trying to use events in the novel to suggest the "inspirations" for later stories by these real figures. So, of course, there is a moor haunted by a huge, ravenous hound, just as an example. All in all, the story is servicable. In trying to get the mood and style right, Peel limits himself to some degree. It is the problem of imitation.
Profile Image for Zanriel.
33 reviews7 followers
August 27, 2014
Flawed characterizations of both The Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane weakened what was otherwise an enjoyable story about a mad scientist and greedy industrialist creating terrifying animal/human hybrids.

The Doctor showed very little of his typical joviality in this story. At least on a couple occasions he even issued dark, violent threats. Talking about "beating the truth" out of one person and threatening to feed someone else to the fishes in bloody cubes.

Sarah's character was also depicted in an uncharacteristically brash way, issuing threats, bullying, and being overall more surly and scrappy than usual.

All that aside, it was an entertaining story, and there were a few twists and endearing touches. It had good pacing, a good ending, and colorful characters. I feel like if this had been anything other than a Doctor Who novel, it would probably deserve at least four stars. As it stands, and I hate to do it since the fourth Doctor is my favorite incarnation of my favorite hero, I can only give this one three stars.

Read it if you're a completionist, but only after you've developed a healthy appreciation for Tom Baker's portrayal from other sources.
Profile Image for Phillip.
433 reviews10 followers
August 15, 2013
This was a well-written and fun Fourth Doctor adventure (featuring companion Sarah Jane). It had all the "monster" elements to a classic Doctor Who story, along with some brushes with history (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Rudyard Kipling). I really don't have much to criticize and recommend this as a great read. I suppose the Doyle and Kipling stuff might be seen as a bit "much" of historical figures, but the story is great, and I easily see the Doctor, grinning, and saying all of his lines in the book.
Profile Image for Nicholas Whyte.
5,343 reviews209 followers
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October 21, 2007
http://nhw.livejournal.com/765775.html[return][return]A glorious Victorian romp featuring the young Arthur Conan Doyle (just after I discovered my own obscure family connection with him) and an even younger Rudyard Kipling, combined with affectionate references to those classic Fourth Doctor stories, "Horror of Fang Rock" and "The Talons of Weng-Chiang".
Profile Image for Deranged.
186 reviews18 followers
November 28, 2013
I absolutely loved reading this. This is the first Doctor Who book I have been able to read and it was so much fun to read. The voice of the Doctor came through so well and I enjoyed how the book showed how much of life is intertwined through the way that the Doctor and Sarah encountered both Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Rudyard Kipling. The way the author fluidly inserted the Doctor's adventure into a 'true' timeline was masterful and I look forward to reading more of his books.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Author 26 books37 followers
May 31, 2008
Fun story full of victorian atmosphere when the Doctor and Sarah try to visit Rudyard Kipling and, of course, get sidetracked when the monsters show up.
The monsters are very clever, the meeting with Kipling was very funny and there's a nice, surprising bit of Who history that pops up.

Would have made a great TV episode.
Profile Image for Daniel Kukwa.
4,740 reviews122 followers
January 15, 2011
It's easily the best of John Peel's original Doctor Who novels. Nothing fancy or groundbreaking, but a solid historical romp, with a few forgiveable cliches, and a good grasp of the 4th Doctor & Sarah Jane Smith.
Profile Image for Sunshine Moore.
320 reviews22 followers
July 24, 2012
Not too bad for a Doctor Who novel, but I refuse to rank these on the same scale as regular literature. References to Conan Doyle and Kipling made it worthwhile, and now I feel the need to read some more of them - cue up Hound of the Baskervilles and Jungle Book, please.
Profile Image for Texv Velis.
29 reviews24 followers
December 28, 2014
This is the first of the Missing Adventure books I have read and I enjoyed it. The character of Sarah Jane is fleshed out, the author makes her more aggressive and violent then in the TV show. The only thing about the book that I would have changed would be a little more action for the 4th doctor.
Profile Image for Clare.
415 reviews5 followers
March 12, 2023
A good use of Who backstory and historical characters, and most of the 'monsters' were saved. I still think Colonel Ross was let off too easily. An entertaining read, one of the better missing adventures.
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