Once again the writers create adventures suitable for the personalities of the different Doctors and ensure variety by shifting between different types of story, although there’s something to be discovered at the heart of each. That’s also the approach Kev Hopgood (sample art right) takes with the seventh Doctor. Attribute the error in that assumption to villainous ignorance, or gloss over it for the sake of the bigger plot.Įven more so than the first volume, there’s significant variation in the artistic approaches, ranging from the cartooning of Philip Bond (sample art left) and Roger Langridge to the welcome sight of John Ridgway’s formal naturalism again applied to the Colin Baker version of the Doctor. As previously seen, a mysterious adversary considers the Doctor’s weak spot might be separating him from his companions, as the Doctor has never had to cope in isolation. Scott and David Tipton’s plot features an adventure for each of Doctors five to eight, each of them ending with the abduction of the Doctor’s companions. In terms of structure, this is much the same as volume one.
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