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Present Danger

por Eddie Robson

Otros autores: Jason Arnopp (Contribuidor), Jonathan Blum (Contribuidor), Niall Boyce (Contribuidor), Mark Clapham (Contribuidor), Richard Dinnick (Contribuidor)7 más, John Dorney (Contribuidor), Simon Guerrier (Contribuidor), LM Myles (Contribuidor), Kate Orman (Contribuidor), Lance Parkin (Contribuidor), Jim Smith (Contribuidor), Oli Smith (Contribuidor)

Series: Bernice Summerfield: Big Finish Anthologies (XIV), Bernice Summerfield: Big Finish (71)

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https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3189483.html

A collection of Bernice Summerfield short stories, set in the middle of Season 11 of the Big Finish audio adventures, which I don't seem to have written up and can't now remember much about. The two audio stories that bracket the collection are both by Eddie Robson, who provides the framing narrative as well for Present Danger as well.

The premise is that the galaxy is under attack from the time-travelling Deindum, and the book fills the space between the appearance of the alien aggressors at the end of Resurrecting the Past and the fightback in Escaping the Future. Since I had missed out on the context, the stories and collection did not work all that well for me, though there are some nice flashes - the cave museum in Kate Orman's “Don’t Do Something, Just Sit There”, and Braxiatel's use of time travel and recorded history in Lance Parkin’s “Winging It”. But really I need to catch up on the Bernice Summerfield audio thread a bit more systematically. ( )
  nwhyte | Apr 28, 2019 |
Present Danger fills in the gap between the audio dramas Resurrecting the Past and Escaping the Future. Partially it serves to just move characters into position (in Resurrecting, Benny and Hass are on Earth, but when Escaping opens, Benny is travelling through time to fight the Deindum with a restored time ring, while Hass is a Deindum prisoner on Maximediras), and partially it serves to dramatize the Deindum War more completely, since it's mostly off-stage in Escaping, but of great importance.

So, it's kind of like Life During Wartime, but it doesn't work quite as well. Life During Wartime felt like a novel by many hands, showing the progression of the Bernice Summerfield range's cast of characters during the months (and months?) of Fifth Axis occupation. Present Danger is more spotty-- it often feels like things that ought to have been dramatized are skipped over in favor of things that are less important. Like, there's no story about how Bev manages to take control back of the Braxiatel Collection, which ought to be a key character point, and the refugees crowding the Collection is referenced in Escaping, but that's dramatized here in only a very cursory way. It would have been nice to see this in Present Danger; instead, the most we get for Bev is a story by Niall Boyce, "The Empire Variations," where she witnesses a time travel adventure Benny has by seeing how works of art in the Collection change as history does. It's a neat conceit, but if the book was going to tell just one Bev story, it doesn't seem like this is the one.

This goes for a number of stories. Like, I enjoyed a lot of them, but they often seemed like sidebars to the Deindum War. It's neat to have a sequel to Battlefield in Jim Smith's "Excalibur of Mars," but should working Brigadier Bambera in really have been a priority of this collection? There are a few too many Benny-on-strange-adventures stories that are tenuously incorporated on the basis of Benny scouring time for weapons to use against the Deindum. That said, Jonathan Blum's "The End Times" is a great Benny-and-Peter tale in the way that only Jon Blum can do, and I was unexpectedly delighted by the return of the tax assessor from Venus Mantrap in Mark Clapham's "In the Ledgers of Madness," where a group of reclusive monks keep their books in an ancient, dangerous language so that anyone who tries to audit them will go mad.

The book's best stories are those that deal with the Deindum War and the characters more concretely. "Winging It" by Lance Parkin focuses on Braxiatel figuring out how to fight the Deindum through time, and it's a clever time war story that I really enjoyed. Kate Orman's "Don't Do Something, Just Sit There" of course is a winner, with Benny trying to protect an indigenous population as Earth and the Deindum duke it out. Simon Guerrier gives us some Doggles and Adrian in "Six Impossible Things," a potent combination given their history; there wasn't just the space for this reckoning in the audio dramas, so I'm glad to read it here. (Is Doggles the worst? Yes.)

LM Myles's "The Better Part of Valour," Oli Smith's "Digital Dreams," and editor Eddie Robson's Hass-focused interludes were among the other highlights. But if this collection was meant to make us feel the immensity of Deindum threat in preparation for Escaping the Future, it didn't quite accomplish that as well as it ought to have.
  Stevil2001 | Nov 2, 2018 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Eddie Robsonautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Arnopp, JasonContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Blum, JonathanContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Boyce, NiallContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Clapham, MarkContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Dinnick, RichardContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Dorney, JohnContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Guerrier, SimonContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Myles, LMContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Orman, KateContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Parkin, LanceContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Smith, JimContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Smith, OliContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
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