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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Welcome Return..., 21 Sep 2000
This book sees the return of Paul Cornells creation, Professor Bernice Suprise Summerfield, or as she prefers to be called Benny. Created as a companion for the Doctor in Virgin's "New Adventures" series in the early nineties, she appeared to have seen her last outing in the final book in that series "Twilight Of The Gods." But now she's back, and she's in pretty good form. Benny is now working as "Archeologist in Residence" at the Braxtiel Collection - a collection of just about everything worth collecting - located on an asteroid. This novel is really to re-introduce the character of Benny through a series of short stories featuring her exploits. The problem with an anthology of short stories written by different authors is that inevitably some will be much better than the others, and that each of them will be short. The best of ten stories on offer here is Kate Orman's "Steal From The World" which sees Benny returing to a planet that she searched for an ancient race on before and a planet on which she suffered a horific accident. Orman is a wonderful writer who has the ability to capture Benny perfectly as she has done on several occasions in the New Adventures. Her story, which mixes Benny's past visit with the current one, weaves towards a rewarding and unexpected conclusion. It's a pity that this was chosen as the second story in the series, as none of the subsequent stories match it's brilliance. That is not to say that they are not good though. Eddie Robson's "The Light That Never Dies" is very good with something mysterious cropping up in the Collection's film library. Matt Jones' "Step Back In Time" and Dave Stone's "The Door Into Bedlam" are also highlights, the latter opens the possibility of Benny's rogue of an ex husband Jason Kane to return. There are no stories that are really bad in this collection, it's just that some of them aren't really that interesting and fail to capture the essence of what makes Benny work. Overall there are enough good stories in this to satisfy a longtime Benny fan, and interest new readers alike. It's main problem is that the short stories give it a stop-start approach and just as the reader is really getting into the story it ends before it has had a chance to develop fully. My only other criticism would be the fact that it is a very short volume, but with more books forthcoming, and these being novels, it looks like Professor Bernice Summerfield And The Dead Men Diaries will mark the start of a new chapter in the future's most famous archelogist. Welcome back Benny. We've missed you.
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