Nightshade (novel)


 * For the plant, see deadly nightshade.

Written by Mark Gatiss, "Nightshade" is the eighth installment in the series of Virgin Publishing's Doctor Who paperback novels. A New Adventure, it features the Seventh Doctor and Ace.

Publisher's Summary
I HAVE DONE ENOUGH!

Ace has never known the Doctor so withdrawn and melancholic. He is avoiding her company, seeking solace in the forgotten rooms and labyrinthine passages of his ancient time machine.

Perhaps he will find the peace he yearns for on his favourite planet, Earth, in the second half of the twentieth century - in the isolated village of Crook Marsham, to be precise, in 1968, the year of peace, love and understanding.

But one by one the villagers are being killed. The Doctor has to act, but for once he seems helpless, indecisive, powerless.

What are the signals from space that are bombarding the radio telescope on the moor? What is the significance of the local legends from the Civil War? And what is the aeons-old power that the Doctor is unable to resist?

Characters
The Doctor
 * The Doctor needs help on his missions and can't allow Ace to go.

Ace
 * Ace's parents met on the dance floor of a sweaty nightclub.
 * Decides to leave the Doctor for Robin, the Doctor deliberatly lands on an alien planet, unable to let Ace go.

Edmund Trevithick
 * He starred in Nightshade from 1953 to 1958.

Jack Prudhoe

Lawrence Yeadon

Robin Yeadon
 * Ace kisses him to calm him from hysteria.
 * Waits months for Ace to return.

Vijay Degun

Professor Thomas Edward Hawthorne

Betty Yeadon

Jill Mason

Constable George Lowcock

Abbot Mervyn Winstanley

Holly Kidd

Christine Cooper

Tim Medway

Billy Coote

Win Prudhoe

The Sentience

Referenced only: Alan, Albert, Alec, Alfred Beadle, Andrew Medcalfe, Bass, Bayles, Bollard, Bridget Cooke, Crithin, Drew Smith, Dutton, Dyson, Eddie Turnbull, Esmé Holland, Harry, Harry, Harry Cooke, Jackie Barrett, James, James Reynolds, Jean, Jeremy, Julia, Louis, Margaret Trevithick, Margie, Mary Cooke, Maurice Trevithick, Messingham, Minnie, Norton, Paula Trevithick, Pemberton, Peter, Phillip Jackson, Polly, Ralph Grey, Rayner, Reuben Peel, Rose, Scott, Shaun, Shearsmith, Stella Peel, Veronica Railton, Wilfrid Holland, Will Todd, William Jarrold, Woodall

Continuity

 * Set Piece explains why the Doctor's shoulder area is such a tender place.


 * Ace and the Doctor's interraction in this novel explains some of the events in Love and War.


 * Happy Endings reveals that Robin Yeadon married Ace's mum.