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The Tenth Doctor: Year Two: The Endless Song

by Nick Abadzis, Eleonora Carlini (Illustrator), Elena Casagrande (Illustrator), Leonardo Romero (Illustrator)

Series: Doctor Who: The Tenth Doctor (vol. 4), Doctor Who {non-TV} (Graphic Novel)

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504533,519 (3.71)5
English (3)  Dutch (1)  All languages (4)
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https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/the-endless-song-by-nick-abadzis-et-al/

this pulls together three very different stories, of which the first story is the best: the Doctor and comics-only companion Gabby end up on a world where some of th inhabitants are intelligent forms of music, a concept that is difficult to portray in any medium, but done very well here. There’s also a New York vignette with Jack Harkness, and an interesting aliens-at-the-dawn-of-time story which has a pretty overt anti-colonialist theme. ( )
  nwhyte | Jul 13, 2023 |
I liked this well enough while I was reading it, but I’ve forgotten most of the plot just a few days later. A spooky coincidence that I was reading it now, though, because it talks about viruses and quarantines. ( )
  rabbitprincess | Sep 24, 2022 |
"Year Two" of Titan's Tenth Doctor series kicks off with this volume, which consists of three stories. The first, "The Singer Not the Song," is the best of them. This series's strength is in its nostalgia for the Russell T Davies screen era, and this story feels like it could have been produced by the man who gave us "Gridlock" or "Planet of the Ood": the Doctor and Gabby visit a planet of "conceptual beings" that can only be heard, not seen... but human music is being used to infect them with a conceptual plague. It's a fun science fiction idea, and the story does some fun stuff with it-- though I couldn't shake the feeling that a story about music would work much better on screen than on the comics page!

Then comes a story that mostly recaps Year One, as Gabby's friend Cindy (who stayed back on Earth at the end of The Fountains of Forever) reads Gabby's sketchbook. I usually enjoy Gabby's sketchbook excerpts, but this was less interesting than their normal use of giving the reader a window into Gabby's mindset during stories; plus, it all turns out to be in aid of foreshadowing something to do with the ongoing Osirian storyline... a storyline that has thus far utterly failed to interest me on any level.

The final story takes the Doctor and Gabby back to the time of the Neanderthals, where alien slavers are kidnapping them for slave labor. Some early shenanigans with the TARDIS translation aside, it's dull, plodding stuff.

Terrible cover model aside (I mean, I'm sure she's a nice person, she just doesn't look right), Gabby looks her proper self in this volume, which isn't surprising, as most of it is drawn by Elena Casagrande and Eleonora Carlini, who I think are uniformly excellent. Great faces, great facial expressions, beautiful vistas, solid storytelling. Something about Leonardo Romero's art turned me off; not enough expression in it, I think. Looks like he drew it with a computer. (I mean, I know probably everyone here drew with a computer-- but I don't like it when the inking is all the same thickness.)

Titan Doctor Who: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
  Stevil2001 | Jan 15, 2021 |
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