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Mass Market Paperback Warlock Book

ISBN: 0426204336

ISBN13: 9780426204336

A new drug called "Warlock" is tearing apart society. Benny is involved with a law enforcement effort to bring it down while Ace is in trouble in a horrific animal laboratory. Only The Doctor is left to discover the truth behind the new drug. Warlock is an original novel written by Andrew Cartmel and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Seventh Doctor, Ace and Bernice. The book is the middle...

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

challenge and reward

the multiple strands in this book must have been a challenge for the author to develop. The great reward for the reader comes in the form of the masterly and creative way in which the author wove the strands into a cohesive and interesting read. Well done!

"Justine never knew the rules..."

WARLOCK is a collection of so many disparate ideas and strands that it stands as a real credit to Andrew Cartmel's skills and abilities that he not only wove them all together astoundingly well, but also managed to create a book that was engrossing, absorbing and absolutely unputdownable. It's another tome in his canon of bleak futures and stories where the Doctor is more a force of nature than a guy who bothers showing up in books that have his name on the cover. But its depressing nature is never gratuitous or overly unpleasant. I wouldn't like to see a whole series of Doctor-less Doctor Who books (the little fellow shows up even less frequently here than in Cartmel's previous book, WARHEAD), but when an individual story is done as expertly as this one is, that is a detraction I am more than willing to accept.The plot is a bit of a mish-mash when summarized, but it works amazingly well in execution. There's a strange new drug called Warlock in the neighborhoods of the not-too-distant future. The Doctor thinks there's something curious about it, so he sends Benny off to New York to investigate, while Ace wanders off into a sub-plot of her own involving hippies, sadistic henchmen, and animal testing. Some gangsters, drug-dealers, and a sizable dose of trippy prose all get added to the mix. Cartmel takes these pieces and hones them into a rollicking good read.There's something wonderful about Cartmel's prose. Ace spends several pages simply pottering around the Doctor's house on Allen Rd and it's absorbing. One chapter is entirely devoted to one man being ignored and it's riveting. Four whole chapters are spent waiting for cops to bust some drug-dealers and it's absolutely electrifying. It's one of the bulkiest Doctor Who books published at 359 pages, and yet the words just speed by. How does he do it?The characters again become something that Cartmel excels at drawing. Even relatively minor players are given intriguing back-stories and believable dialog. This is a more character-based story than WARHEAD was, which makes sense, given the more introspective nature of the storyline. The Warlock drug plays a heavy role in the plot, and many sequences revolve around the effects that it has on the minds of the users. These sections contain a lot of great writing, with the paranoia and other effects produced by the drug being very realistically portrayed. The portions of the story where characters attempt to navigate their way through the mind-bending and bizarre qualities of the Warlock drug were far and away my favorite parts. The things that Cartmel does here are quite chilling.There are some minor flaws. One of the themes running through the book would appear to be that scientific testing on animals is immoral and wrong. Whereas, all I got out of it was that scientific testing on animals is immortal and wrong if undertaken by a bunch of sadistic and maladjusted bullies. Cartmel has occasional bouts of playing too heavy-handedly

Groundbreaking Materal

For those of you who aren't familiar with Andrew Cartmel, he was script editor for the Doctor Who television series in its last years. He's written three novels, using the beloved Doctor and his companions. But be warned. His stories take place in a dark future, where he's not squimish about some grusome details. It has mature themes about drugs ( the title is the name of the drug), and so forth. One complaint from Doctor Who fans is the lack of detail for the Doctor. Although the Doctor is barely treated any more special than the other characters, but it adds more to the mysterious nature of the Doctor that Cartmel likes to show. What is the most important thing about Warlock is that it is a good book just as a sci-fi book. The ending is also a nice touch with something most people wouldn't be expecting to happen. Personally, Andrew Cartmel is very talented writer, and should consider writing more books.

Warlock: depressing and refreshing

_Warlock_ is a piece of genuine Doctor Who. It can easily be criticised for being too dark or disturbing. While it is both of these, in the context of Doctor Who it is nonetheless valid. In fact, in my mind, it seems to show the limitless possibilities of the show's premiss. As a book by itself, it is first rate. The psychology of the story is well fitting, and the characters are well defined. The themes it tackles, while usually not found in most Doctor Who, are deep and interesting, and deserve to be explored in the context of Doctor Who. The plot is well rounded, tying together nicely at the end, with all seemingly loose strands brought together. The characterisation is also worthy of mention. Whether or not you like the characters is not at issue, it is whether or not you believe them. And in this, I believe that Andrew Cartmel pulls off something fantastic, that every one of them becomes part of you, of how you view your world. Overall, this book breaks new ground, not just in Doctor Who, but in literature itself. To quote the cover blurb, Warlock moves beyond cyberpunk in into a world where sanity is a matter of brain chemistry. It is a triumph!
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