The King's Dragon by Una McCormack

Aug 07, 2014 20:31

Another Who novel and my feelings about these remain unchanged. This pretty much maintains the standard set by The Way Through the Woods. So it has a nice central idea, a little less Who-ish this time since it relies on they kind of World-building that modern Who is less keen on - a low tech, but highly peaceful society and an apparent dragon ( Read more... )

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Comments 5

daniel_saunders August 7 2014, 20:00:05 UTC
I've only read three new series novels. They were OK: fun, but very disposable, but very clearly for children. I was glad I got them for £1 each and doubt I would buy more unless they were similarly cheap. And I never much liked The New Adventures or the other pre-2005 novel ranges, so I'm not nostalgically longing for "the good old days".

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louisedennis August 8 2014, 15:06:28 UTC
I get a very strong sense from then that things are being kept simple for children, but its hard to put my finger on what exactly gives that impression. These two Una McCormack ones, in particular, are well put together.

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daniel_saunders August 10 2014, 10:54:48 UTC
Well, one of the books I read was full of toilet humour (mind you, so are some episodes of the TV series...). Generally, I found the plots more simplistic and the characterization thinner than on TV or even compared to the better Target novelizations.

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louisedennis August 10 2014, 15:45:35 UTC
That's my impression, but I find it hard to back up in several ways. A plot doesn't need to be complex for a book to be adult, and at least in these cases the characters are not completely cardboard - I wonder if the working is just a little too visible somehow, so the reader doesn't get to observe the nuance of character for themselves but has their attention explicitly drawn to it.

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