Doctor Who: Diamond Dogs (3/5)
The Doctor and Bill end up on a space station orbiting Saturn in the 5th millennium. Suffice to say, things go to hell, very quickly.
Mixed on this one. The weird thing is, the Doctor and Bill almost feel out of place, in that the book has a fairly solid grasp on science, whereas DW is generally science fantasy. As in, the station harvests diamonds from Saturn, as certain elements descend through the clouds, the pressure of Saturn's atmosphere turns them into diamonds. I forget the actual process in detail, but it's a process that has a basis in science, and there's actual theories that such diamonds could be found in the atmosphere of gas giants.
Anyway, it's a decent read.
Doctor Who: Plague City (3/5)
Really not fond of this one. In general, I prefer DW future stories to historical ones. Heck, even present stories to historical ones. And suffice to say, this book didn't change my opinion.
The Doctor, Bill, and Nardole end up in Edinburgh, 1645, in the midst of a massive plague. The Black Death (I think - a separate outbreak from the one in the 14th century), but the people are dying way too fast - hours, instead of days. That, and there's ghosts of the dead walking around, and the mysterious Night Doctor is visiting the families of the victims.
The book has a lot of Scottish dialogue in it, and I'm sorry, nothing against the Scotts, but it only serves to slow things down. It doesn't even really make sense, since the TARDIS's translation field should be automatically translating the language to the characters, and by extension, the reader. The identity of the Night Doctor and what's causing the existence of the ghosts is actually a nice twist, but it's not enough to really elevate this novel. For me, at the end of the day, just a "meh."