A review by kribu
The Scientific Secrets of Doctor Who by Marek Kukula, Simon Guerrier

4.0

Short review because I'm completely wiped out by squeeing and fangirling over the brand new (as of the moment of writing this review) Doctor Who Series 9 trailer, but anyway, I finished this earlier today and, as the rating shows, really liked it.

I admit I was quite hesitant when I first heard about this book - it's been a long time really since I've read nonfiction, and also, I'm not very sure of the entire concept of "actual science" in combination with "Doctor Who" (~thinks Kill the Moon and Into the Forest of the Night just for starters, and I actually liked both those episodes~).

Then I heard the book also has a bunch of brand new short stories, and my interest went up several notches. And I figured "okay, I'll get it and read the short stories".

.. soooooo. I actually ended up reading the whole thing? Obviously the science chapters are written on a level that should be understandable also for younger readers, but hey, it's been 20 years since I last gave my brain a workout, so that suited me just fine. And I really enjoyed the science chapters, although the ties they had to the short stories were rather tenuous.

I liked the short stories as well. I especially like that we get a new story for each (numbered) Doctor and four (and a bit) new ones for Twelve. :D Also, there were some gloriously shippy Twelve/Clara moments in some of them, so that helped too. :D

But yeah, I actually enjoyed this bunch of stories - some were better than others, but I didn't dislike any of them, and most were pretty interesting as well as paced okay.