Based on the beloved Doctor Who episode of the same name by Douglas Adams, the hilarious and brilliant author of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, comes City of Death… The Doctor takes Romana for a holiday in Paris—a city which, like a fine wine, has a bouquet all of its own. Especially if you visit during one of the vintage years. But the TARDIS takes them to 1979, a year whose vintage is soured by cracks in the very fabric of time itself.
Soon they are embroiled in an alien scheme which encompasses home-made time machines, the theft of the Mona Lisa, the resurrection of the much-feared Jagaroth race, and the beginning (and quite possibly the end) of all life on Earth.
It’s up to the Doctor and Romana to thwart the machinations of the suave, mysterious Count Scarlioni—all twelve of him—if the human race has any chance of survival.
But then, the Doctor’s holidays tend to turn out a bit like this.
“For a book all about the Mona Lisa, don’t be surprised that City of Death is the true masterpiece here.”—Doctor Who TV
“A first class job of work.”—Starburst Magazine
“A beautiful collaboration, a work of love, and a celebration of the very best Doctor Who that’s luminous with joy.”—CultBox
“Goss has faithfully reproduced the feel and mood of the television story and has embellished it with extra detail which makes it all the more enjoyable.”—The Press and Journal (UK)
“A rollicking adventure.”—SFCrowsnest