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Doctor Who: Scratchman
- 4th Doctor Novel
- Narrated by: Tom Baker
- Length: 8 hrs and 40 mins
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Summary
In his first-ever Doctor Who novel, Tom Baker’s incredible imagination is given free rein. A story so epic it was originally intended for the big screen, Scratchman is a gripping, white-knuckle thriller almost forty years in the making.
The Doctor, Harry and Sarah Jane Smith arrive at a remote Scottish island, when their holiday is cut short by the appearance of strange creatures – hideous scarecrows, who are preying on the local population. The islanders are living in fear, and the Doctor vows to save them all. But it doesn’t go to plan – the time travellers have fallen into a trap, and Scratchman is coming for them.
With the fate of the universe hanging in the balance, the Doctor must battle an ancient force from another dimension, one who claims to be the Devil. Scratchman wants to know what the Doctor is most afraid of. And the Doctor’s worst nightmares are coming out to play…
Tom Baker himself reads this legendary Doctor Who adventure, a spine-chilling thriller forty years in the making.
Written by Tom Baker with James Goss Storyline by Tom Baker and Ian Marter Additional voices by Nicholas Briggs
What listeners say about Doctor Who: Scratchman
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- Amazon Customer
- 10-03-19
great story, well read by the author.
Tom Baker at his best clearly enjoying bringing his own work to life. Those who remember his stint as Doctor will enjoy this especially. Took me back to my childhood Saturday evening's.
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- Nephrite
- 18-02-20
The Doctor Who story decades in the making!
Doctor Who: Scratchman by Tom Baker with editorial assistance from James Goss
Doctor Who: Scratchman is almost impossible to believe. Or at least the story behind it is. After all it’s 40 years in the making! At some point in the mid or late 1970s Tom Baker and Ian Marter got talking. Ian Marter played companion Harry Sullivan in Doctor Who from 1974 to 1975 in Tom Baker’s first televised series. He later in life became a prominent writer for the Target Doctor Who novelisation range – which lasted from 1973 until about 1994 – having been somewhat recently resurrected last year to release ‘Target-style’ novelisations of some modern Doctor Who stories. This is probably why the story behind Scratchman goes as far as it does.
According to fan legend and rumour, Tom and Ian got talking about a potential Doctor Who film idea. Either they came up with similar ideas around the same time and combined the two or Tom came up with an idea and Ian helped him turn it into an actual film pitch. It became something of a pet project for the two and they worked on multiple versions until some time in the 1980s. Every time they suggested the idea they were kindly but firmly told it wouldn’t be practical – either because Tom was still working on the show or because of budget concerns – even when said budget was a film budget.
With a great deal of reluctance they abandoned the idea. At least until recently. Due to all the rumours and stories Tom told after Ian’s passing, people knew that manuscripts had once existed. A lot of people assumed they were long gone and so Scratchman became a semi-mythical story. Not quite the holy grail of Doctor Who but certainly the kind of story mentioned by the more curious types.
I say recently because starting in 2012 James Goss began to novelise the few televised Doctor Who stories that had no book equivalent. Once those were almost all dealt with he discussed some interest in Scratchman. Then someone did the impossible. They found one of the old manuscripts! At this point Tom Baker was approached for permission to turn it into a novel with some adjustments and additional material and Tom agreed so we have the audiobook co-written by Tom and James and narrated by Tom himself.
I apologise for the somewhat long-winded explanation of what Scratchman is. But I feel its important to help the listener and reader understand it. This was the Fourth Doctor and Harry Sullivan’s idea of what big-screen Doctor Who could be...before that became a somewhat disappointing reality in the 1990s. The story is very interesting and also very Tom! I won’t give away too much though!
We start on a remote Scottish island. (There is no further indication as to whereabouts in Scotland this is other than a joke late in the book about catching a trout in Loch Lomond in the 6th century so it could be around there or the Peedie Sea for all they tell us.) The Doctor, Sarah and Harry try and relax by playing games and having a picnic. Except a scarecrow steals the ball and by the time they get back the picnic is destroyed. They find a small town nearby being menaced by more hideous approximations of scarecrows and bossed around by the world’s cruelest gossiping busybody. The Doctor does his best but Scratchman is coming for them all and he’s very very persistent.
The easiest way I can describe Scratchman as an audiobook is Doctor Who to the core. The story has a way of taking things that would be considered either normal or slightly off anyway and amping up the horror aspects. Despite Tom’s joviality as a narrator and the Doctor’s as a character it knows full well how to scare you or surprise you and when to do it. There’s a reason they’ve advertised it as a Doctor Who horror novel. If you aren’t careful it could sneak itself into your dreams at night.
Tom as a narrator is also excellent at changing tone. Joking about stuffy boardrooms and offices one moment and describing in gruesome detail as a living creature burns away limb from limb the next and making it flow as if he’s just offered sugar to go with your tea but you can sense something is wrong!
I won’t give away much of the plot or who/what/? Scratchman is as I hope my readers will give the story a chance and listen to the end. But I will say it’s a very entertaining story extremely well told. It takes quite a few unexpected turns, has a decent amount of surprise appearances and by the time I finished it I was genuinely sad it was done. I wished it had been longer. Not because the story was bad but because I was enjoying it that much!
Be careful when you begin the story though. Make sure you follow the Doctor. There are so many twists and turns along the road after all...
Sayonara!
Nephrite
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- Anonymous User
- 18-03-19
Tom Baker and Doctor Who at its best
Was always fascinated by the never produced Doctor Who Meets The Scratchman film and listening to this was very enthralling. Very well read by the indomitable Tom Baker. A great edition to the fourth Doctor's library of adventures. Would recommend for all whovians and general audience alike!
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- Ieuan Richards
- 29-03-19
Fantastic!
Scratchman is a fantastic listen! Well-written, brilliantly creepy and Tom's narration is just superb, brilliantly bombastic with great voices!
I hope for more from Doctor Four!
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- Ahmer Memon
- 02-05-19
awesome fun and great to hear Tom Baker
Awesome fun, a great adventure with the fourth doctor. amazing to have a new story with one of my favourite doctors ever.
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- Graham G Grant
- 23-02-19
Killer scarecrows - and a deadly game of human pinball
Fantastic narration by Tom Baker of a self-penned Doctor Who tale that would have been a classic series of episodes in the ‘70s, and indeed was once mooted as a movie. The Doctor and his companions battle killer scarecrows on a Scottish island, and tackle other assorted monsters, before slipping into a nightmarish dimension - and coming face-to-face with a deadly nemesis. Other highlights include the Doctor and his helpers being drawn into a game of human pinball, as their worst dreams come alive around them. Endlessly inventive, compelling and with touches of trademark eccentric Baker humour (‘Chapter 24: you’ll like this one!’), this is obligatory listening for all Whovians...
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- M. Nuttall
- 29-09-19
listen to this one
the great lost movie.
The story is perfectly fine, but the Narration by Tom Baker himself is spellbinding
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- Daddy Bear
- 23-06-19
My favourite era of Doctor Who
How fabulous to hear a new story containing the dream team of the Doctor, Sarah and Harry.
Utterly enthralling
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- hgwells 1899
- 05-02-19
Down The Rabbit Hole We Go
It all starts out on familiar, frightfully amusing ground - then goes full tilt through the looking glass and into the Doctors adventures in Bakerland.
It's best listened to, not so much narrated as performed by the Great Curator himself, features one unwelcome and ear-numbing cameo, and is full of literally laugh out loud moments from start to finish.
In-jokes, irreverent references to incarnations past, present and future, witticisms which meander to a punchline that makes it all make perfect sense suddenly...macabre imagery and breathless access into Bakers vision of his own private TARDIS...including a chilling peek behind the door of the one room the Doctor keeps locked...from himself. It all comes together like clockwork, a heartsfelt, close-up portrait of the Fourth Doctor in the first person, as only he could paint him.
It's a tall story all about fear, told by a man who smiles everytime he delivers bad news, then laughs and holds up a Jelly Baby in the face of danger...and who isn't afraid to pen a familial-love letter to a friend and fellow traveller he, and we, can't help but confess to adore.
Does it all work? Of course not. Would I personally have wanted to miss one word of it?
Not for all the world...or even, perhaps, the next one ;)
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- Claire Cooper-Jones
- 05-04-19
Simply amazing!
What is not to love? A brilliant story full of twists and turns. A true novel that explores a complex (though easy to follow) plot line. And the reading by Tom is simply the best book narration I have heard. Somehow he manages to narrate and be the Doctor all at once. If you like classic Who, you will find this awesome.
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