Wolfsbane (novel)

 was the sixty-second novel in the BBC Past Doctor Adventures series. It was written by Jacqueline Rayner, released 1 September 2003 and featured the Fourth Doctor, Sarah Jane Smith, Harry Sullivan and the Eighth Doctor.

For him this novel takes place during his time on Earth following the events in the novel The Ancestor Cell, between the events of Casualties of War and The Turing Test.

Publisher's summary
Harry Sullivan.

Died 28 November 1936.

"Deliver us from Evil."

Harry is dead. Having left him abandoned and alone in pre-war Britain, the Doctor and Sarah try to solve the mystery of his death. But the only witness is in a lunatic asylum, driven mad by what he has seen. He tells of murder and mutilation, of living trees and long-dead legends, of wolfmen and war... And of a mysterious stranger known only as the Doctor.

Can it be true that Harry discovered the last resting place of the Holy Grail? Why are the flowers and trees in a Somerset village in full bloom at Christmas? And is it just a coincidence that Harry died under a full moon...?

Plot
to be added

Characters

 * Eighth Doctor
 * Fourth Doctor
 * Sarah Jane Smith
 * Harry Sullivan
 * Emmeline Neuberger
 * Godric
 * George Stanton
 * Hester Stanton
 * Ernest Trelawny
 * Jane Jones
 * Lucinda Ryan
 * Rose Perry
 * Ezekial Perry
 * Thomas Charnock
 * William Hodges
 * Caleb Johnstone
 * Amos Wetherham

Foods and beverages

 * The Doctor drinks ginger ale.
 * Sarah used to eat strawberries from a local farm when she was a child. She drinks red wine. She doesn't especially like porridge.

Continuity

 * The Eighth Doctor mentions travelling abroad for several years. (PROSE: The Year of Intelligent Tigers)
 * Harry reads a rejection letter from the Doctor's literary career. (PROSE: Mordieu)
 * To spark the Eighth Doctor's memory, Harry mentions Skaro. (TV: Genesis of the Daleks)
 * When talking with Trelawney, Sarah apparently asks if 'the Doctor' was a friend of hers with white hair, likely a reference to the Third Doctor, although the Fourth Doctor shows no sign of wondering if the other Doctor is his own other self.