Anachrophobia (novel)

Anachrophobia was the fifty-fourth novel in the BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures series. It was written by Jonathan Morris, released 4 March 2002 and featured the Eighth Doctor, Fitz Kreiner and Anji Kapoor.

Publisher's summary
Imagine a war. A war that has lasted centuries, a war which has transformed an entire planet into a desolate No Man's Land. A war where time itself is being used as a weapon.

You can create zones of decelerated time and bring the enemy troops to a standstill. You can create storms of accelerated time and reduce the opposition to dust in a matter of seconds.

But now the war has reached a stalemate. Neither the Plutocrats nor the Defaulters have made any gains for over a hundred years.

The Doctor, Fitz and Anji arrive at Isolation Station Forty, a military research establishment on the verge of a breakthrough. A breakthrough which will change the entire course of the war.

They have found a way to send soldiers back in time. But time travel is a primitive, unpredictable and dangerous business. And not without its own sinister side effects...

Plot
to be added

Characters

 * Eighth Doctor
 * Fitz Kreiner
 * Anji Kapoor
 * Dr Paterson
 * Lane
 * Ash
 * Norton
 * Mr Mistletoe
 * Bishop
 * Bragg
 * Charlotte
 * Georgia
 * Hammond
 * Shaw

Continuity

 * The Doctor states that it requires more energy to travel backwards in time rather than forwards "because it's uphill", an analogy previously used by the Fourth Doctor in AUDIO: Legacy of Death
 * The TARDIS crew use a crank handle to open the doors when the TARDIS loses power, previously done in TV: Death to the Daleks)
 * The Vortex Wraiths were evacuating the time vortex in order to escape the Council of Eight. (PROSE: The Slow Empire)
 * The Doctor and his companions left Endpoint two days before this story. (PROSE: Hope)
 * Sabbath removed the Doctor's heart in PROSE: The Adventuress of Henrietta Street.
 * Anji says that nothing could be weirder than the planet of Poodles. (PROSE: Mad Dogs and Englishmen)
 * The clock-faced peoples' method of "recruitment" is similar to the method used by the Horofax, save for the fact that the Horofax merely changed the subjects' perceptions of their past rather than actually changing their histories. (AUDIO: Storm of the Horofax)