Category: Transportation Devices

Book Review | “A Captain for Laura Rose” by Stephanie Grace Whitson A new-to-me-author of #INSPY #HistFic!

Posted Thursday, 19 May, 2016 by jorielov , , , 0 Comments

Ruminations & Impressions Book Review Banner created by Jorie in Canva. Photo Credit: Unsplash Public Domain Photographer Sergey Zolkin.

Acquired Book By: I am a new reviewer for Hachette Books and their imprints, starting with FaithWords which is their INSPY (Inspirational Fiction) imprint of releases focusing on uplifting and spiritual stories which are a delight to read whilst engaging your mind in life affirming and heart-centered stories. I found Hachette via Edelweiss at the conclusion of [2015] and have been enthused to start reviewing for them, as I picked a small selection of stories I felt I would enjoy reading; three of which were from FaithWords.

I have been wanting to read the stories of Stephanie Grace Whitson for awhile, and felt this was a good author to start with as I become familiar with INSPY by FaithWords. Being an avid reader of Historical Fiction (including within the INSPY fiction market) I was delighted she focuses on this genre to tell her stories! I received a complimentary copy of “A Captain for Laura Rose” direct from the publisher FaithWords (an imprint of Hachette Book Group Inc.) in exchange for an honest review. I did not receive compensation for my opinions or thoughts shared herein.

On my passion for INSPY Fiction & Historical dramas:

Ever since I first picked up a copy of Frontier Lady by Judith Pella, I have been truly inspired by historicals written by INSPY authors! Little did I realise this story would spin itself into a trilogy, as I do have a copy of Stoner’s Crossing but not of the final story Warrior’s Song. I have only read Frontier Lady as a result and looking back, this is a prime example of my beginning roots as a ‘book blogger’ as I remember gushing about this book to such a level of joy, my family told me my ‘memories’ of the story felt as if they had actually sat down to read the story for themselves! Even then, as a young girl I was finding my voice to talk about stories and how those stories gave me such visual joy in reading them!

INSPY fiction has been in my life for such a long time, it’s hard to think back on a moment I was not reading it, as I have previously disclosed my joy in finding the Cooper Kids Adventure series, inasmuch as the fact I have roamed through INSPY and Mainstream markets since I became an avid reader somewhere in my youth – between the angst of learning to read (as a dyslexic reader) and finding my niches along the way by the time I hit Fourth Grade when my teacher refused to believe I couldn’t find enjoyment out of the written word. Mum and Da encouraged me to read whatever interested me, whilst encouraging my Indie spirit to seek out book shoppes that were not major chains… this helped twofold, as Indies were more lax about children in their stores who were seeking a ‘next read’ but needed time to sort that out and they had a larger inventory of books in which to seek! I also had a healthy curiosity of the fiction I’d find at a local Christian Book Store – where I’d spend hours looking through the adult fiction sections before I stumbled across the Mandie series and Cooper Kids Adventures. From there, I jumped straight into adult INSPY fiction as I found the Children’s Lit sections a bit too limiting – hence Judith Pella! The collective works of Dee Henderson soon followed suit, by the by!

I hadn’t realised it until I became a book blogger three years ago, I have the tendency to soak inside the historical past moreso than the Contemporary offerings throughout the fiction realms! Should have noted this I suppose along the way, but I read so very diversely across genres, it’s hard to pin-point me down to any particular ‘genre’ or style of literature at any given moment! Laughs. If you’ve visited my Story Vault by Genre you’d understand immediately! However, for a bit of a short history about my appreciation for INSPY Fiction, look towards my 70 Authors Challenge which this year I am making enroads towards whittling down a bit to where more entries are listed!

When it comes to the works by Ms Whitson, I felt like she was approaching the historical dramas with story-lines that not only appealed to my historical passion of interests, but with a touch of what I seek when I look towards INSPY writers who are crafting historical stories! Since I’ve become a book blogger, you might have seen my enthused joy in reading historicals by Susan Meissner (time slip historical – A Fall of Marigolds); Carolyn Steele (Willow Springs & Soda Springs) and Carla Kelly (Softly Falling & Summer Campaign). It has been an honour of mine to pick up the search for inspiring historical novelists since I first discovered Judith Pella and Lois Gladys Leppard (Mandie series) – I had a sense Ms Whitson might become the next author I add to my ‘short list’ of personal favourites; hence why I was wicked happy FaithWords gave me the pleasure of selecting two of her novels to begin reading as I become a reviewer of theirs and join their blogger team!

Fun Stuff for Your Blog via pureimaginationblog.com

Book Review | “A Captain for Laura Rose” by Stephanie Grace Whitson A new-to-me-author of #INSPY #HistFic!A Captain for Laura Rose

Laura Rose White's late father taught her everything he knew about piloting a Missouri River steamboat. He even named their boat after her. Despite that, it seems that Laura will forever be a "cub pilot" to her brother Joe, because in 1867, a female riverboat captain is unheard of. That is, until tragedy strikes and Laura must make the two month journey from St. Louis to Fort Benton and back in order to save her family's legacy, her home, and the only life she's ever known.

The only way for her to overcome the nearly insurmountable odds is with the help of her brother's disreputable friend Finn MacKnight, a skilled pilot with a terrible reputation. Laura loathes having to accept MacKnight as her co-pilot, especially when she learns she must also provide passage for his two sisters. Straight-laced Fiona has a fear of water, and unpredictable Adele seems much too comfortable with the idea of life in the rough and tumble environment of the untamed river and the men who ply it. Though they are thrown together by necessity, this historic journey may lead Laura and the MacKnights to far more than they ever expected.


Places to find the book:

Borrow from a Public Library

Add to LibraryThing

ISBN: 9781455529056

on 4th March, 2014

Pages: 336

Published by: FaithWords (@FaithWords)
an imprint of Hachette Book Group, Inc. (@HachetteBooks) via Hachette Nashville

Formats Available: Trade Paperback and Ebook

Converse via: #StephanieGraceWhitson, #INSPYbooks, #ChristFict or #ChrisFic

& #INSPYfiction & #HistFic or HistRom

About Stephanie Grace Whitson

STEPHANIE GRACE WHITSON is a bestselling inspirational author of over 20 books. She's a two-time Christy Award finalist and the winner of an RT Book Reviews Reviewer's Choice Award for Best Inspirational Romance.

When she's not writing, she enjoys taking long rides on her Honda Magna motorcycle named Kitty.

Read More

Reading this book contributed to these challenges:

  • 2016 Historical Fiction Reading Challenge
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Posted Thursday, 19 May, 2016 by jorielov in 19th Century, Apothecary, Balance of Faith whilst Living, Bits & Bobbles of Jorie, Blog Tour Host, Book Review (non-blog tour), Coming-Of Age, FaithWords, Female River Captains, Historical Fiction, Inspirational Fiction & Non-Fiction, Missouri River, Naturopathic Medicine, Reconstruction Era (1865-1877), River Captains & Freight Carriers, Steamboat, Widows & Widowers

+Book Review+ A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk by Scott E. Tarbet (a Shakespearean re-telling)

Posted Saturday, 12 April, 2014 by jorielov , , 4 Comments

Parajunkee Designs

A MidSummer Night's Steampunk by Scott E. Tarbet
Artwork Credit: Dale Pease (of Walking Stick Books) http://walkingstickbooks.com

Published By: Xchyler Publishing () 18 November, 2013
Official Editor WebsitesSite  | Twitter
Converse via: #AMidSummerNightsSteampunk
Genres: After the Canon | Classic Re-Telling | Shakespearean | Steampunk | Fantasy
Available Formats: Trade Paperback and E-Book
Page Count: 324


Acquired Book By: I contacted Xchyler Publishing about receiving books in exchange for honest reviews and was asked to pick the two books I’d like to request. Moments in Millennia was my second choice, as my first choice was A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk. My interest in this novel is based on a life-long love of William Shakespeare’s writings! I received a complimentary copy of “A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk” in exchange for an honest review direct from the publisher Xchyler Publishing. I did not receive compensation for my opinions or thoughts shared herein.

On Appreciation of William Shakespeare:

As a participant of the A to Z Challenge this April, whereupon each blogger is undertaking 26 Essays | 26 Days, I elected to focus on my love and appreciation of Classical Literature on Day 3: Letter C. Therein, I discuss my fascination and affinity for William Shakespeare from the very first moment I first read his plays and Sonnets. I knew I had found a writer I would be reading for the rest of my life. He had this classic way of ebbing out the human sphere of emotion, psyche, and our living observations. He was the best at conveying each dynamical evocation of human emotions as well. A champion of wordsmiths, it was through his bar of sophisticated eloquence I tend to seek out in other writers. He always felt to me to give great pause before enduing his characters with action or dialogue. He wanted us to have a legacy of thought left behind and for this I am in his debt.

Imagine my happiness in finding there was an author out there who would not only take his own passion for Shakespeare to a new height of re-telling the magically laced “A MidSummer Night’s Dream” and retrofit it into a Steampunkified re-telling of the classic tale with the bentings of a scientific quality of theory!


Author Biography:

Scott E. TarbetScott Tarbet writes enthusiastically in several genres, sings opera, was married in full Elizabethan regalia, loves Steampunk waltzes, and slow-smokes thousands of pounds of Texas-style barbeque. An avid skier, hiker, golfer, and tandem kayaker, he makes his home in the mountains of Utah.

You can learn more about Mr. Tarbet through the Interview I conducted ahead of this book review! He shares his thoughts on Steampunk as a genre, his appreciation of Shakespeare, and a lot of keen bits for writers & readers alike!

Book Synopsis:

Immerse yourself in this Steampunk retelling of Shakespeare’s classic, replete with the newfound wizardry of alternative Victorian technology, mistaken identities, love triangles, and deadly peril, set against the backdrop of a world bracing itself for war, and Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee.

Pauline Spiegel, a master artificer like her mother before her, wants just one thing: to wed the love of her life, Alexander MacIntyre, a lowly undersecretary of the Royal Household. However, a long-term pact between her parents, and a noble House, stands between her and her happily ever after. When a priceless mechanoid of unfathomable power is stolen, Pauline finds herself entangled in skullduggery and international intrigue, upon which the fate of nations rest. Only with the help of her friends, and a brilliant scientist with a swarm of micromechanical insects, can Pauline survive the dark forces determined to destroy her. But will her betrothed and his rag-tag band of semi-mechanical soldiers reveal Alexander’s secrets as well?

 


To begin with a parting of prose:

A lover of quotations and bits of poetry, I am one reader who appreciated the warming of my reading palette with bobblements of poems greeting me at each interface! A lovely poem reminiscent of the innocence of fairies greets you before you reach the Prologue. And, yet another poem graces the upper corner of Chapter 1. A little nibbling of foreshadow in which I took the most delight! And off from here comes the divergence into a world of mechanisms and the air in which humanity’s door is slightly skewed towards automation. Rehabilitating veterans of war has been turnt on its heels to retrofit survivors into the most efficient entity of their trades. A fantastical yet questioningly haunting insight into how production and quantity can supersede plausibility and ethics.

Each chapter is lit with a piercing thought writ out through the hand of poets to help give heed to the next foray of intrigue!

My Review of A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk:

As I nestled into the story of A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk, I attempt to recollect if I had read the original play or if perchance, I had seen an adaptation of it instead? The corridors of my memory are a bit foggy at best, which is why I had to shift a bit of my fragmented memories and emerge into the sadistic fever of mechs who were created not necessarily for the well-being of their inhabitors but for the progression of automated industrialism as I aforesaid. The shockingly brutal rebuilding of a sentient being is off-set by the fact that the mechs do not seem to realise their individualistic freedoms have become abandoned on the whim of their creator.

The words in which Tarbet uses to create his universal pace is a pure delight to this wordsmith’s heart! He gives you a felicity of choice as you ease your way forward into the chapters which yield the most foreshadowing to satisfy your appetite for the action yet to transpire. Picking up where Shakespeare had left off is not an easy task, but to knit together a story which honours the canon and gives such a creative spark to Steampunk at the same time is a celebration of his writing style.

The forbearing inertia of caution is under-stitched into the story of the classic tale, giving a new appreciation for the choices humans have made since the Victorian age as each path chosen has turnt out a different avenue of progress. If we had opted instead to keep the heart of what Steampunk gives the reader, the age of steampower and gaslight we might have made deviations in other areas where the Industrial Revolution had yet to enlighten. By keeping Victorian technology in place, we see how devious the experiments can take inventors when their minds are wired for clockwork and automation. A little too much good for their own souls if you ask me!

At first I found it a bit tricky to ascertain how to proportionate the mech characters in my mind’s eye, as I’m quite new to Steampunk & Clockpunk alike. Then, all of a sudden whilst the mech men made their way through to central London, it dawned on me how to visualise them! From that moment forward, I had this envisioning shadow of how they were created and how they would stand out in ordinary streets of London! I think if there were illustrative plates for this particular piece it might have helped me out a bit. Character sketches to off-set the lack of baseline recognition! Except to say, Tarbet expertly gives such a vivid viewing of each of the mech’s mannerisms to purport an honest impression of how they can be perceived! I am such a visual learner that at times, when I step outside a world I’ve previously visited, I must adjust my eyes to a new one! In this, I celebrated my ability to see visually in my mind’s eye what Tarbet was attempting all of us to embrace!

A clever re-telling by far, as he has etched in such a reformed rite of passage for women in the story, where there is an alliance between Lakshmi, Jennie, and Vicky – all women of equal power and without the ambiguity of being able to blend in from behind prying eyes. For them to launch a series of events to forestall a dictator’s diabolical plans to overtake surrounding nations is one of the best moments I was celebrating! It gave way to the expression that ‘behind all good men, is a great woman’; and in this particular story it could not be more true! A separate alliance was forged out of necessity from the mech men, a wickedly fascinating engineer Pauline, her two suitors Alexander & Winston, along with a besotted in love girl named Clementine who only has eyes for Winston!

At the very heart of the story is the searing warmonger Wilhelm who is blinded by carnal rage and a robust ill-fated sense of power. His intentions for his home country is strengthened by his assertion that power and proclivity towards violent rule are his inherit gifts. A madman on the collision course towards altering history whilst utilising another madman’s offering of technology. There are moments of intense fighting and heated battle between human and mechs, and mechs vs mechs with an equaling sense of unease. Each is caught in the cross-hairs of an emerging war neither fully understands. It is only when logic is cast aside and reason is indued by a spark of enlightenment which dances straight into the vortex of human understanding can true change be cast. Free will of man and mech is the turning point towards diplomacy and democracy.

As I was reading the story, I thought this particular book would be a great lesson in ethics for a University class to undertake. There is enough within the chapters to take both sides of the argument and dissect the worth of its message. What foolish folly and provocation can be found in the nettling and maddening proclamations of one man’s dream for supreme rule.

Equality & Diversity : Undertone Components

An undertone component of A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk is the inequality of the mechs inside the story. They have become their own race of men as their lives were irrefutably altered when they came home from the battlefield and/or the hospital in which their very life hung in the balance between being medically altered through technology and death. Due to their new status of half man | half machine, they are no longer viewed as individuals outside the scope of what trade they perform based on their ‘upgrades’ towards industry efficiency.  And, therein lies the problem. Rather than being viewed as the people they were prior to the surgeries that were performed without their consent, they are no longer given the compassion of humanity by any person who crosses their path. Rather instead they are refuted from view, a mere glimpse of a hint of the ravages of war and a different age of invention.

Tarbet presents both sides of the argument giving a positive light on how restoration of a person’s self-worth, self-identity, and the living freedoms of liberty each of us is innately inherit to have is plausible if there are still those who agree all sentient life has rights to keep in tact.

Fly in the Ointment:

Although I enjoyed reading this re-telling of William Shakespeare’s “A MidSummer Night’s Dream”, there is a curious attachment in the second half of the story to bring out the full measure of Jack the Ripper’s presence. At first, the subtle nodding towards Hitler’s reign over Germany; the conquest of Napoleon through France; and the merciless tactile militant force of the mechs carved out of the unwilling criminally insane patients was taken for what each representation was given to highlight. However, for me, this stretched a bit too far into the darker shadows of the theories behind why Jack the Ripper killed and what his motivations were to hunt innocents in the streets of London. I was a bit surprised that the wielding of the alternative history components were writ as strong as they were, as the backdrop of the story which illuminated the most joy for me were the clockpunk and automation engineering technologic advances on the side of the good.

There is always a battleground arc for good vs. evil, but there are times where I feel the vile bits to highlighting said evil can inadvertently overtake the good bits. I was pleased to see Tarbet use the eloquence of Shakespeare to empathise the vocalisations of human emotion without falling into the quandary I normally express in Fly in the Ointment. No, it’s not an issue of language but rather of how far pushed the envelope felt to me for the level of violence against the backdrop of where the story was leading. Of course, all stories are open to interpretation of the reader, and I for one, felt the story was guiding me towards one passageway of an ending rather than diverting down another.

A decidedly splendid extra:

Behind the conclusion of A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk, the author’s biography & acknowledgements and a bit of a mini catalogue of titles via Xchyler Publishing itself, is a decidedly splendid extra: a preview of On the Isle of Sound and Wonder by Alyson Grauer! A book which is not yet released and an author of whom Mr. Tarbet spoke about in his Author’s Interview!


A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk Book Trailer by Xchyler Publishing

There is something magical afoot at Xchyler Publishing as their music accompaniments inside their book trailers draw your imagination into the narratives of their stories long before you pick up their books!


This book review is courtesy of:

Xchyler Publishing

check out my upcoming bookish events and mark your calendars!

I have been blessed with four spotlights on behalf of Xchyler Publishing:

An Editor Interview with Penny Freeman,

a book review of Moments in Millennia: a Fantasy Anthology,

and my Interview with author Scott E. Tarbet ahead of this book review!

I’d be keen to hear reader responses to my review of A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk, as I was happily settled into the alternative history backing of story against the clockpunk elements of automation before plunging head-first into the Jack the Ripper thread. Have you ever felt ensconced into a story-line which at a certain point in time arched into a different thread of discovery than you forethought? What do you look for within the realm of Steampunk, Clockpunk, and automation stories? What draws you in and what if anything disappoints you?

{SOURCES:  A MidSummer Night’s Steampunk Book Cover, and synopsis were provided by Xchyler Publishing and were used by permission. Author photograph & biography were provided by the author Scott E. Tarbet and used with permission. Book Review badge provided by Parajunkee to give book bloggers definition on their blogs.  The book trailer by Xchyler Publishing had either URL share links or coding which made it possible to embed this media portal to this post, and I thank them for the opportunity to share more about this novel and the author who penned it.}

Copyright © Jorie Loves A Story, 2014.

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Posted Saturday, 12 April, 2014 by jorielov in 19th Century, Action & Adventure Fiction, After the Canon, Airship, Alternative History, Automation, Book for University Study, Book Review (non-blog tour), Book Trailer, Bookish Discussions, Bullies and the Bullied, Classical Literature, Clever Turns of Phrase, Clockmakers & Watchmakers, Clockpunk, Clockwork & Mechanisations, Clogs & Gears, Debut Novel, Dirigible, England, Excessive Violence in Literature, Fantasy Fiction, Fly in the Ointment, Genre-bender, Good vs. Evil, Indie Author, Inspired By Author OR Book, MidSummer's Night Dream, Re-Told Tales, Steampunk, the Victorian era, Warfare & Power Realignment, William Shakespeare, Wordsmiths & Palettes of Sage, Xchyler Publishing

+Reading Challenge+ Sci-Fi Experience 2014

Posted Saturday, 4 January, 2014 by jorielov , , , , , , , 0 Comments

2014 SciFi Experience
(“Strength and Honor” by Stephan Martiniere, used with the artist’s permission)
Finding a renewed joy in reading science fiction stories during SFN, and having my hours to enjoy the stories grow a bit limited as November shifted into December, I was most delighted to find: the Sci-Fi Experience! (Review Site of the Experience!) As 2014 continues to move forward, science fiction & fantasy will both play a larger role on my blog as I am a member of The Classics Club, whereupon one of my focuses is specifically on: classic science fiction, classic fantasy, and classic/modern Magical Realism. (I tend to include the latter under this umbrella due to the elements which attach the sub-genre to the creativity of the former!)

When I first stumbled across this particular reading challenge, I was elated on the one level I wasn’t able to complete all of my SFN posts as scheduled originally! I wanted to take December & January during the Experience to stitch everything back together, and complete the journey I had taken during Rinn Reads most excellent month of sci-fi loveliness! This is prior to realising that my December 2013 would be blissfully full of holiday events, concerts, and the mirth of joy which surrounds the Christmas Season! My local community opened up their doors to such a beautiful celebration of joy this year, I was overtook by the festivities to where I lost hours to enjoy all the lovely reading adventures I had scheduled to partake in at the very same time! Therefore, January is my month of redemption, to where I can go back through my SFN Posts, tweak them, post them, and be confident in knowing that even if your original plans get a bit delayed from their original intentions, its okay to complete our goals at a later date which works better for us! Not only as book bloggers, but as readers! Our reading lives should never be stressful nor taxing, and in this way, I am always thankful the bookish community online is such a warm, engaging and adaptable group of people!

I wanted to select a few titles to read during the Experience, specific to this Challenge, which is why whilst engaged in a lovely conversation with an author (Kate Elliott) I have been keen to read since I was seventeen (i.e. when I was first introduced to “King’s Dragon”, part of the “Crown of Stars” series), via our serendipitously lovely Twitter chats, I was encouraged to seek out the following authors & their stories:

  • Gate of Ivrel (Book One: Morgaine series) by CJ Cherryh {ILL REQ}
  • Jaran (Book One: Jaran series) by Kate Elliott {intrigued to read for eons!} {ILL REQ} UPDATE: The book came in by ILL late January
  • Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey {keep reading about it; the suspense of what’s inside is over!} {ILL REQ} UPDATE: The book came in by ILL late January
  • The Boy With the Cuckoo-Heart by Mathias Malzieu {I found this via Roof Beam Reader originally, grabbed it off a library display (featuring clocks & clockpunk titles) w/o realising my library had it in their catalogue!}
  • *NOTE: ILL REQ = inter-library loan request

You see, I took option #2 because originally she had made this suggestion:

For the curiously inclined, the entire conversation can be viewed!

At the very same time, if you are curious to know which

Sci-Fi November | Hosted by Rinn Readsposts I will be working throughout January, they are as follows:

A Sherlockian-Steampunker Janeite: Tells All

TBA (Sci-Fi Blogs) & TBA (Sci-Fi Authors I Have Read)

TBA (Sci-Fi Yet to Read)

New2Me: SciFi Serials & SciFi Zines

Sci-Film Films [film reviews]

Doctor Who Reviews & Conversations

SFN TBR Jar

& as many book reviews focused on
Steampunk, Dystopian, & Time Travel
as time will allow!

With a bit of an added twist and bonus, I am going to be

featuring Seventh Star Press titles and authors the week of the 26th!

Consider it Seventh Star Press Week here on Jorie Loves A Story!

Crown of Vengeance (Fires in Eden {World of: Ave}, Book 1) by Stephen Zimmer,

The Writers Workshop of Science Fiction & Fantasy (Anthology), [27 January]

and The Brotherhood of Dwarves (Book 1) by D.A. Adams!

Author Guest Post: On writing Dwarves by D.A. Adams [26 January]

{SOURCES: The 2014 Sci-Fi Experience was granted permission to use the artwork by Stephen Martiniere in their official badge for all participants to show their solidarity during the event! Sci-Fi November Badge and Event Badge were provided by Rinn Reads for participants to advert the month-long event and to encourage people to follow along with those of us who are contributing! Tweets between Kate Elliott and Jorie of Jorie Loves A Story were made possible by embed codes via Twitter.}

Copyright © Jorie Loves A Story, 2014.

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Posted Saturday, 4 January, 2014 by jorielov in Blogosphere Events & Happenings, Doctor Who, Dystopian, Fantasy Fiction, High Fantasy, Sci-Fi November, Science Fiction, Space Opera, Steampunk, TARDIS, The Sci-Fi Experience, Time Travel, TV Serials & Motion Pictures

*SFN* | Feature: Diary of a Not-So-New Whovian

Posted Tuesday, 19 November, 2013 by readerlymusings 2 Comments

Shabby Blogs

Introduction

Hello, everyone! This is Christine from Readerly Musings, and I thought today I’d do a little something to celebrate Sci-Fi November by guest-posting here at Jorie Loves a Story.

When Jorie first told me about SFN, I was both excited and dismayed. Excited because an abundance of Sci-Fi posts in the book blogosphere for the month of November is an awesome idea! Alas, the dismay quickly set in because I, as someone who is participating in NaNoWriMo for the 8th year in a row, knew I would not be able to take part. Until today, that is!

Entering the TARDIS…

On November 2, Jorie posted about the beginning of her journey to becoming a Whovian and her excitement reminded me of how I too came to love Doctor Who – about six years ago.

I had heard rumblings about it for months online. Friends were talking about it on LiveJournal, posting fan fics, making icons, and (much like the Doctor himself) trying to welcome Martha while getting over the loss of Rose.

It was June 2007 and, unbeknownst to me, the third series of ‘New’ Doctor Who was airing. Personally, I was much more interested in preparing for the release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows and all that it would mean. One such way was in joining an online Harry Potter RolePlay in the vein of TV show Law & Order. One of my fellow RP-ers was a Whovian and using David Tennant to portray an original character. Upon finding out I had never watched Doctor Who and absolutely no inkling as to who David Tennant was, she quickly sent me a link to where I could watch episodes of Doctor Who online (it has since been taken down) and instructed me to watch the 2006 Christmas special, The Runaway Bride.

I know some Whovians might be shocked to discover that the first episode of Doctor Who I ever watched was The Runaway Bride. Especially because back then Donna Noble’s character was not synonymous with the word ‘awesome’ and there were Whovians who thought the character of Donna too loud-mouthed and brash, and would soon be debating the announcement that Catherine Tate would be reprising her role in series four.

I enjoyed The Runaway Bride immensely, and I fell in serious love with David Tennant’s portrayal of the Tenth Doctor, and the show itself. I mean, I’m posting this, aren’t I? *laughs* Alas, with everything going on in my life that year, I did not get a chance to watch another episode until months later in, coincidentally, November.

A Journey Through Time – And Space!

Drawn by Christine D. in 2008.
Artwork Credit: Tenth Doctor, drawn by Christine D. in 2008.

Once November came around, and I realized how long it had been since I had watched The Runaway Bride (with the last line haunting me – and still doing so to this day – due to the great deal of emotion tied to it), I made an agreement with another friend to use it as one of my word count incentives during my 2nd attempt at NaNoWriMo. December came soon after and I was already making icons from Doctor Who screen captures and owned the first series on DVD. A few days before Christmas, I wrote my first fan fiction (though it was very short, less than 500 words), and on Christmas morning my parents gave me the second series on DVD. I had quickly become rather… well, obsessed. And invested. I had not yet heard the term ‘Whovian,’ and I’ve no idea when I finally did, but looking back it had taken me about two weeks from the time I watched the Ninth Doctor’s first episode until I became one – though David Tennant was, and still is, my Doctor.

Alas, there was one problem with The Runaway Bride being my very first episode. I sort of knew what was happening in the series two finale (seriously, do you remember that line I mentioned in the last paragraph?!?!?) and, as such, I dreaded watching it unfold on-screen. And, because of how much I dreaded it, I waited almost three weeks before I finally watched Army of Ghosts and Doomsday. However, there was a light at the end of the tunnel, if you will, because once I watched them, I changed my entire LiveJournal layout so it was dedicated to the Doctor and Rose and that beautifully heart-wrenching “wall” scene.

From there, I came across a little problem. A dreaded ‘what to watch?’ dilemma because I could not decide if I dared watch series 3 or check in with Torchwood’s first series to see what Captain Jack Harkness was up to. Ultimately, I decided on Torchwood. Why? Two words. John. Barrowman. That and the fact he returned to Doctor Who at the end of series three in Utopia, but mostly because I wanted to see more John Barrowman. And Captain Jack. Although I am not a big fan of violence and gore, I did somehow manage to get through the first series – do not ask me how, but my answer will probably be ‘the promise of more Captain Jack.’

Once I finished Torchwood’s first series, it was onto series three. Which I will unashamedly admit I finished in two days. TWO. DAYS! I finished it just in time too, because series four started airing four days later so I could watch along with everyone else! And, in between episodes, I could watch Torchwood’s second series, and the first series of The Sarah Jane Adventures.

I cannot even begin to explain how much I loved Doctor Who’s fourth series, or how much it broke my heart. Actually, in a way, I can….

Full-Time Whovian

Drawn by Christine D. in 2011
Artwork Credit: Ninth Doctor, drawn by Christine D. in 2011

The fourth series was over, there was no new Doctor Who until Christmas and I was distraught. The kind of distraught that only happens after you spend a little over half a year getting caught up with a show that you have quickly fallen in love with only to find you have to wait almost as long for just one more episode. ONE. So I did something only dedicated fans would do – I delved further into the world of Doctor Who.

I was not yet interested in attempting to watch Classic Who because the sheer amount of episodes, not to mention the amount of missing episodes, was incredibly daunting), so instead I dived into the fandom. I made icons, I wrote another short fan fiction, I read fan fiction, I looked at fan art, I drew fan art (two of which I’ve included in this post)…. And then I did something crazy. I’m not even kidding, ‘crazy’ is the only word I can use to describe it. Don’t believe me? I made a website. A completely fan-run website. Dedicated not only to Doctor Who, but also Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures. All pretty much on my own, to boot.

A Side Note: Before I go on, I have to say that while this Whoniverse website of mine does still exist and you may be able to guess what it is, I have had to largely abandon it. This is due not to my no longer being a fan (because oh my god, am I still a dedicated Whovian!), but the fact that I spent so much time on it, keeping it updated on every aspect of the Whoniverse, and had to do so all on my own even when others promised to help, that it became more of a job than the hobby that it once was, and every time I try to update it I feel this overwhelming pressure to ‘get it right’ and it just shouldn’t be that way. Neither can I update it to say that it is closed or on an indefinite hiatus, because it literally pains me to do so. This website was “my baby” for so long that I cannot imagine giving it up and so I leave it up as it is, with the promise of updates to come, in the hopes that one day I can sit down in front of my computer and just fall back right into it, experiencing once again the joy that updating it (or simply finding something to update it with) brought me.

Now that series four was over, and I was caught up with the Doctor Who spinoffs until The Sarah Jane Adventures’ second series started airing in the fall, I continued my exploration of the fandom, and experienced a great deal of dread and sadness during 2009 due to David Tennant’s announcement he was leaving the role and the lack of episodes until 2010. During that time, there was a glimmer of hope. It wasn’t Matt Smith, whom I fell in love with from the first time I watched his interview following the announcement he was taking over the role from David Tennant, but the fact that I was able to watch the majority of the second series with my best friend in celebration of my 21st birthday (May 29, 2009) and see her enjoy most of those episodes for the very first time. Though I can’t say I introduced her to the show, as she had previously seen a few episodes, I can say that I played a major role in her own journey to becoming a Whovian. I have tried to do the same with my father, but he only saw David Tennant’s farewell story a month or so ago and has yet to watch any of Matt Smith’s tenure – which is a shame, given Peter Capaldi is taking over the role at the end of this year’s upcoming Christmas special.

Today, and Awaiting the 50th

Now its November 2013, almost a full six years since I watched the episode Rose (alas I don’t know the exact date), and I am still very much a proud, somewhat crazy, Whovian. I have a DVD tower next to my desk with the two top shelves dedicated entirely to Doctor Who, Torchwood, and The Sarah Jane Adventures. I own all the soundtracks, along with quite a few Doctor Who (new series only) novels and audiobooks, along with a bunch of other memorabilia (including some fan-made ones), and my brother recently sent me a collectible bust of my Doctor he bought me as a gift when he went to Comic-Con which I am still trying to find a place of honor for. I’ve also watched some Classic Who, including the majority of Jon Pertwee’s tenure as the Doctor whom I fell in love with simply from watching clips featured in Doctor Who Confidential – a show which I still miss greatly.

As I await the airing of the 50th anniversary special on the 23rd, I have fallen in love with a fan fiction a friend wrote that features the… well, to avoid spoilers, mystery character seen at the end of The Name of the Doctor and am planning on writing a few “deleted scenes” and a sort of “spin-off” to go along with it after NaNoWriMo is over and I have taken a short reprieve from writing. I also purchased tickets to see the 50th anniversary special in 3D at a movie theater in the area on November 25th with the same best friend I had the series two marathon with in 2009. I’m also looking forward to the next 50 years of the show, as I do agree that it is a show that can go on forever, but as far as the near future goes, I am looking forward to Peter Capaldi taking over the controls of the TARDIS.

I fear I do not have the words to properly end this post,
so instead I will leave you with this, because I find it fitting:

“I always rip out the last page of a book. Then it doesn’t have to end. I hate endings!”
~The Eleventh Doctor, Angels in Manhattan

Are you a Whovian? (akin to Christine)

OR a Nu-Whovian? (akin to Jorie)

{CONTRIBUTOR POST: by Christine for Jorie Loves A Story}

{SOURCE: Badge post lovely provided by Shabby Blogs, with edits by Jorie in Fotoflexer.}

Copyright © Jorie Loves A Story, 2013.

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Posted Tuesday, 19 November, 2013 by readerlymusings in Alternative History, Contributor Feature or Post, Doctor Who, Fan Artwork of TV | Film | Book, Sci-Fi November, Science Fiction, TARDIS, Time Travel, Transportation Devices, TV Serials & Motion Pictures

*SFN* | Feature: Diary of a Nu-Whovian! Week One!

Posted Saturday, 2 November, 2013 by jorielov 10 Comments

SFN Feature badge created by Jorie in Canva

The music explodes you into this wonderful place where your itching with excitement, ready to brace yourself for anything that might alight in front of your eyes, except for exactly what emerges on screen! The Doctor and the content of the series is well-written, bang-on Brit(!), quirky, humour with a dose of heart, with a good dash of otherworldly charm to endear you to watch it! You adjust your sensory perceptions to allow for the pace of the series to settle into you, rather than fight the progress of how the story is being told, and somewhere between the opening sequences before the TARDIS jumps through the wormhole to the concluding scenes,… you realise, I AM A WHOVIAN! Who knew!? Seriously, WHO knew!? :)

Randomly Becoming Acquainted with a bloke called: The Doctor

I knew I wouldn’t have enough hours in the day to fashion myself a true Whovian, as I didn’t want to rush through the series, but rather take my time to soak into them! Absorb the characters, the setting, and the quirky TARDIS at a rate that befits the series and pays homage to the creatives behind the project! This is a series that has had such a well-established fan base that it revivals all the ones I have been a part of myself! :) Therefore, with Rinn’s quick-thinking to contact a few Whovians who could pick out at least 5 episodes that they deemed fit to help a person become acquainted with the series, I took up the challenge to accomplish the impossible: ILL (inter-library) loan the series in 5 dvd set increments!

These are the Who episodes as I watched them for the first time and the impressions they left me with afterwards! Consider this the Wide-Eyed Girl’s Diary of Doctor Who! And, for those who are curious how I came to settle on ‘how’ to watch the recommended episodes!? I compiled the list by ‘series’ and then made a bit of a haphazard erring on not always getting the ‘episodes’ in order of proper sequence! I felt The Doctor might smirk knowing that, considering he cannot sort out the difference between 5 minutes (of being gone!) to 12 years!! Time is temporal and is in a state of flux!

NOTE: There are SPOILERS in this post because its a reflection of my thoughts as I watched the series!

| Doctor Who – Series 5 |

1. Vincent and the Doctor

Overview Images on the DVD Menu: A sci-fi series that reminds me of Quantum Leap (for time travel), Star Trek (for alien creatures & citizens), most BBC mystery series; Alien Nation. Gadgets: James Bond, Babylon 5, etc. I could dig this! I really, seriously could see myself digging this! I don’t know why that lizard is extending its tongue but then again, maybe its weapon or warning device!? Everything I’ve seen in Star Wars & Trek make me aware of numerous possibilities! This is going to ROCK! :)

Impression of the Music: upbeat, adventurous, exciting, exploding with curious perplexities, possibilities that lie in the impossible, a gearing up for the unknown. I wonder if the music and score is put to soundtrack!? Ooh, boy! Wait. IF I seek out if this is true I just might have on my hands a whole new realm of soundtrack music to collect! Afterall, most of the music I listened to growing up (aside from the 50s-70s, classical, and contemporary singer-songwriters) came from sound for motion picture!

Opened with Vincent van Gogh in a cornfield painting which flicks back to Museé d’ Orsay in Paris. (clever imagery!) The Doctor finds an anomaly in the church painting with a monstrous face in the window. (reminds me of watching series on SciFi Channel – Dark Shadows? Night Gallery? One of them!) The curator tells the Doctor that Vincent painted the painting of the church approx. 1-3 June, 1890. Vincent actor looks a lot like the artist and takes his role seriously. Cottage full of his paintings. Vincent shares his philosophy of the wonders of the universe, including his view of how colours dictate the paintings. Creature with a tail comes out of nowhere to attack Amy, the Doctor, and Vincent in the courtyard garden. (okay this is SERIOUSLY reminding me of “The Land of the Lost” now!) First look at the TARDIS. I *love!* the typewriter! (scanner, printer, uploader of information – Sam’s Ziggy would be impressed!) The creature sequences reminded me of “The Land of the Lost”. Finally learnt the girl’s name is Amy as I didn’t catch it at first.

The creature was a “Graface” or such (did not understand the term) of a brutal race that solitary was left behind when the rest of its kind left the planet. Reminded me of being trapped in Jurassic Park when they were in the confessional vs the freezer/fridge. In the death of the creature Vincent felt remorse as he was not seeking to kill it. The creature died afraid, alone, and blind. He could relate to the desolation the creature felt due to how he was treated in towne. Whilst they were entwined with hands in circle on the ground whilst watching the heavens parade before them Vincent started to narrate what would shape his painting “Starry, Starry Night” for all to see. The TARDIS takes all 3 back to Paris and the Museum so that Vincent can see that he has worth and that people adore his art. Its nearly too much for him to take in, and I guess this universe with the TARDIS doesn’t mind going against the rules of not revealing too much too soon!? Amy was eager to get back to Paris to see if there were more paintings painted before he died, as she was certain he would not exit the world at age 37 now that she had interacted with him. The Doctor had to reassure her that every life is a mixture of good and bad and each part doesn’t erase the whole. A lot of heart in this episode, can see why it was recommended! Sunflowers was enscribed “For Amy” which made her feel better inside, but she felt so deeply for Vincent I know a part of her grieved.

Parting Thoughts:

Clearly this was not what I was thinking it was going to be like and these were the quick notes I took *whilst watching the episode!*, as I wasn’t keen on hitting the pause button the whole time! It was a mad dash to get the notes jotted down and not have my eyes off the screen for more than seconds at a time! By George, I did well, eh!? Seriously though, when I saw that mutant (& larger version!) of the rooster-bird, I knew right then and there I was going to be ‘in for it!’ Meaning that I have a sensitive heart, scare easily when it comes to freaky creatures who come at you from the shadows (i.e. Harry Potter (the motion pictures) pushed my limits tenfold!), to where I get freaked out of my skull very easily! Hence the reason I do not watch horror movies!! Ooh, my dear ghouls — no! Exception only applies to a limited filmography of Hitchcock (big Hitch fan!), and of course, classic film noir and psychological suspense from the 1920s-1960s which is truly called: classic horror, who knew!? (no pun intended that time! laughs)

Joking aside, this was an emotional episode because I felt for Vincent as much as I felt for Amy,… tears were surely welling because you could get inside the mind & heart of the artist of Vincent rather than perceiving him as his peers left him to be known. History I think has always been decidedly harsh on Vincent, enso, it was nice to see he was treated better in this retrospective piece! Definitely recommend you have a tissue box handy to watch this episode’s concluding scenes! The Museum scene when they take him to see the Gallery featuring his paintings!? Ooh, my dear ghouls — gutting!

Makes you wonder if everyone who struggled as much as he did in life could have had someone intercede on his behalf and turned around the ending of which we all know happened!? The episode pointed out a few things to this regard, and its always true that a person who has a friend is a person who is in better spirit and health! There was so much heart in this episode! My heart was warm and overflowing with emotion! Its a brilliant one to start with I can tell you that!

Mum saw most of this episode with me but she didn’t get to see the others except for a brief viewing of the next one.

2. The Eleventh Hour

Dangling outside the TARDIS over London (I think!?) and TARDIS is on fire, appears to be self-destructing. (now there is an opening sequence for you!) Decidedly British. Slingshots through space. Crashed at a house of a young girl who bore the striking resemblance to Amy! The Doctor was soaked straight through because he was in the pool which was placed in the library of which he had to climb out of to get to the surface on the rope! She needed help with a crack in the fissure of time that was in her bedroom wall! The TARDIS meanwhile spilt into two. Bubble of light came out of the Doctor and his fingertips glowed bright gold. (is this an indication of his regeneration/reincarnation?) Started to crave apples. Then, yoghurt, bacon, beans, bread & butter, and finally settled on fish fingers & custard which reminded me of a woman who was withchild and experiencing cravings of her own! Laughs. The same repetitive message said “Prisoner Zero Has Escaped”. Giant eye in crack flicked a card out into the world where the Doctor caught it and read the same message. Highly eccentric Doctor and disheveled. (love it!) TARDIS starts to work again. Amelia packed her suitcase and waited outside in the garden for the Doctor to return. Which he did, but he thought it was only 5 minutes when it had been 12 years! She hand-chuffed him to the radiator which made me smirk to no end! I had a feeling she wasn’t a bobby too! :) Prior to this, I knew there was something to ‘do’ with the extra door opening and closing but I was not quite prepared for what emerged! :( (remember: sensitive heart!? creatures from the depths of the ocean do not bode well either!)

The quick switch to the coma patients threw me off a bit, but I resettled into the pacing of Who, as it takes a bit of adjusting to learn the series quirks, trades of mannerisms, fade ins/outs, and the pacing of the stories as their told. Once you get the hang of it, it glides rather easily and you can just soak up the stories! Amelia Pond became Amy Pond. I liked how she said she went through several shrinks. Of which is how I presume she put her ‘fantasy’ of the Doctor to bed once she created the cartoon and stories of him!? Loved how they had 20 minutes to the end of the world due to a misunderstanding of the statement by the aliens wanting to collect the errant prisoner. He keeps collapsing and grabbing his chest, but I cannot fathom as to why!? Is that the key that speaks to him in such a physical manner or can his own race communicate with him internally through pain!? Lost on that note! Revealed he’s not just a time traveler but a time lord!

A hint of the back-story! I picked up on the psychic link for a dormant mind bit. The freaky scary images I had to get used too  but I think I’m in for a long ride of them! Laughs. The eye ship for sure was less intense than the prisoner which was too much like a creature that lives in the bottom depths of the sea with those bone sharp scary teeth that gives me chills! :( Loved the firetruck that went through the hospital! Two years later from the date he left Amy he finally returns! I oft wonder how he loses track of time so easily!? Offers Amy to go with him which she does! Loved seeing the inside of the TARDIS again even though I have yet to know why its called a “TARDIS” which I know is an acronym!?

Parting Thoughts:

What I appreciated about this episode is that it shows the way in which the Doctor met Amy and how she came to travel with him in the TARDIS! I loved the interplay between the two of them, and can we just say that the Doctor has some of the best facial expressions for an actor that I have ever seen!? I didn’t catch his name, but he is fast becoming my ‘favourite’ Doctor,… is he the 5th Doctor because this was the 5th series!? Or, am I making the wrong presumption!? I just loved how he put his whole being into playing the part, giving me the impression that he loved it dearly! I liked how Amy was meant to travel with him, and I had a feeling that the crack in time meant more than they were saying, because I distinctly remembered a ST: TNG episode where a similar crack in time caused a LOT of havoc! I cannot think of what else to say, because I was so enthused about watching it!!

Except to say, I thought it was hysterical how he kept saying he had a new face and with it comes a whole new palette for food! I was wondering, truly, if I was starting to see glimpses of who the Doctor is on a personal level and how he is able to be seen as he is. I suspected he was not of Earth but rather a traveler from another place in the universe but I wasn’t confirmed on this note until I saw the Weeping Angels episodes that made me have shivers and chills up my spine! Oyy.

3. The Time of Angels

Gun is a laser to open a safe to get a message to the Doctor by having an object called a home box placed in a Museum. The box was stolen 12,000 years prior to when the Doctor would find it! Love the wide shifts in time continuum! (even if I could not sort out where ‘time’ began for Amy and where it had taken them both next?) I liked the opposite of the black box is the home box. Clever. Timens!? Professor Riversalt, no Riversoul? no Riversong! She looked so familiar to me! I kept thinking is that Beatrice!? (only to google her name and realise that it is actually Dr. Corday from ER! apparently my memory took a hiatus!) (Alex Kingston) (Corday by the by was always a favourite of mine, hence the familiar recognition even if this is one time I couldn’t place where I knew the actress!) Wicked exit and entrance to the TARDiS in space. Diary of her past and his future. (now that is a juicy tidbit to hear!) The troops arrive which I thought was interesting as they were led by Father Octavian and Clerics serving under him instead of a traditional army — did I catch the Doctor say 51st Century!? The Weeping Angels were what led them to where they were on a planet I barely caught the name of! Amy & the Angel on the tv was a close call but even I knew that was a foreshadow for a greater problem down the road! When I saw Amy had the itch in her eye I knew I was right! There was a rumouring of what the Doctor doesn’t know but should know but can’t know at the same time. The Angel in question was hidden in a catacomb of statues. Although those statues turned to be an army of Weeping Angels and the crash of the ship was not an accident but a rescue attempt as they needed an energy source! (reminded me of several Trek episodes!) When Amy’s hand turned to stone I feared which direction this would take me next!?

Parting Thoughts:

Honestly, I now understand why everyone thought I’d dig this series due to my passion for Trek! Its so blatantly obvious to me now that its laughable to consider that I held off so long in watching it! Oyy vie. I think the reason I couldn’t pull forward where I knew Alex Kingston from is because I have sort of shelved my memories of ER over the years to where all the lovely memories of those episodes are slowly erasing a bit in my memory. I had to let them go because it was too difficult for me to keep them after what happened after Season 5.

The Weeping Angels were some of the most intense villains I have ever come across!!! Although I haven’t seen a lot of Who I would have to imagine that for Whovians, they might agree with me that the Angels are the most intense!? I tried not to think about some of the more shuddering bits of this episode but reflect more on Riversong’s presence and her affect on the Doctor!? He revealed more bits about himself in this episode and for every random fact given, I had a swirling of questions floating inside me! This is a series that makes you want to ask ‘questions’ but without SFN I wouldn’t have the option to ask!

4. Flesh & Stone

They find the oxygen factory-forest in the ship. Crack in the wall of Amy’s room apparently meant more than they let on previously as it re-appeared on the ship. An angel grabbed the Doctor but failed to capture him. As Amy started to die in the forest, they had her close her eyes so that the angel inside her couldn’t see and therefore would delay the reaction of being consumed by death. She was supposed to remember what the Doctor told her at the age of 7, but even I struggled to remember which specific thing he said that had the impact he was looking for in that moment!? Mind you, being so new to Who I was trying to absorb everything in one night as the set was due back the next day! :( Stonecage is a prison where Riversong was kept after killing a good man, which made me think she killed the Doctor in a future timestream. Not sure why I felt that but I did. The time crack was still happening despite the Angels being cast into it to seal. Amy had to walk with closed eyes through the forest before being transported the rest of the way. The Doctor thought at first he had to go into the time crack but released the gravity instead to send the angels. Amy learns that she’s a time traveler now officially and that it alters her perception and memory of everything she experiences. The Doctor felt good about realising that time can be re-written which lends to reason he wants to know that for a future time. Amy kisses the Doctor who is completely gobsmacked by her attentions after learning she was meant to wed another in the morning! (I thought for sure she intended to wed him!) He told her he was 907 years old and that he wouldn’t age anymore but she would. She kept trying to engage him romantically but he finally realised that he had to address the other matter of the time crack, the fact that it was referencing Amy Time as the base code of the universe. And off they went in the TARDIS and I wished I had had more time to watch more episodes!

Parting Thoughts:

This one brought up a lot of questions in regards to the Doctor himself and his position in the life of Riversong! There is something ‘there’ but I am not sure what ‘it’ is! The crack in time also reminded me of ST: Generations (film) by the by! Mostly due to the emotional keel of this episode I was a bit disappointed I had not an extra one to see that might have been a bit lighter in tone as getting through two episodes with those Angels was trying! :( On the level of production, I loved how they created the ‘effect’ of the Angels, especially in how they were portrayed and how they kept increasing towards the actors!

| Doctor Who – Series 5 | Concluding Remarks

Ooh, my dear ghouls why did I not watch this series SOONER!? No, seriously, I am wayy over the moon in happiness for being in a position to watch Doctor Who!! The humour is bang-on Brit and the methodology of the production is very British too which is an asset because the Brits know how to make motion pictures & tv serials like this one shine and rock! I like the fact that everything in our known reality and universe is simply suspended! Including, some of the ethical choices from other series (i.e. Star Trek, Quantum Leap, etc) where there was always a borderline knowing of when to cross the line and when not to cross the line. I was highly surprised to see Vincent walk into the Museum in other words! Happy, overjoyed, but surprised!

I spied titles of other episodes as part of the Series 5 set, but I promised myself I’d limit myself this month during SFN to ‘stick to the plan’ by watching *ONLY!* those episodes that were sent to me in a list by Rinn! I can always resume where I left off by re-attempting to get all of them back afterwards!! :) I am sure my local library will think I jumped straight to the moon at that point, but perhaps, one day they will get the Whovian Universe in the catalogue!? One can hope!!

I’m itching to see more Who, and I have to be patient because between my posting schedule + my ensuing book tours, I have to balance the time I have to give to SFN + to my blog! Therefore, through patience and persistence I shall be watching the rest of the Who sets that arrive!! I have a heart full of gratitude to Maria & Rinn, as well as the 2 others who tweated about my foray into the world of Doctor Who based on my previous post! Warmed my heart, you all! I’m not in the social media realms (aside from the bookish blogosphere of course!) due to time constraints, but my appreciation for those who are active and think of others whilst they are tweating or Facebooking is limitless! Bless you for spreading the word! :)

Will I make it!? There is only one way to find out! Come back each *Saturday!* to see my progress!

I yield to the Whovians who are participating in SFN to help me understand better the bits of Who that befuddle me and of the pieces of which I might understand if I had had the time to watch each serial straight-through rather than in the bobblements that I am choosing to do! I look forward to seeing your comments! I like how this is taking shape as its seriously a “as I watch Who, I am writing about Who” diary! My eyes are WIDE OPEN! Cheers!

This feature is brought to you by:

Sci-Fi November | Hosted by Rinn ReadsIn conjuction with: A Wide-Eyed Girl Slips into the Whovian Universe!

{SOURCES: Sci-Fi November Badge provided by Rinn Reads for participants to advert the month long event and to encourage people to follow along with those of us who are contributing! SFN Feature badge created by Jorie in Canva. Post lovely provided by Shabby Blogs with edits by Jorie in Fotoflexer.}

Copyright © Jorie Loves A Story, 2013.

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Posted Saturday, 2 November, 2013 by jorielov in #SciFiMonth, Alternative History, Britian, Doctor Who, Library Love, Sci-Fi November, Science Fiction, TARDIS, Time Travel, TV Serials & Motion Pictures, Typewriter Culture