I've listened to the first two Jago & Litefoot stories now (not counting the Companion Chronicles pilot). They're entertaining, but not flawless. The Bloodless Soldier was somewhat contrived in how it managed to draw Jago, Litefoot, and Ellie all into the same affair separately, though that won't be so bad if they don't make a habit of it. It had a pretty intense ending, with a bold twist in Jago having to bear the burden of putting the guy out of his misery. The problem, though, is that there was no follow-up on that in The Bellova Devil, even though it's evidently set not long after. Hopefully it will have consequences later on.
I had issued with the lack of continuity in another way, since it was weird in Devil to see Litefoot being so dismissive of the possibility of vampires when he'd dealt with a werewolf or something of the sort in the immediately previous story. But it's an interesting contrast -- Soldier was a straight-up fantasy-horror premise, while Devil ended up having a mundane "it was all a scam" resolution with an ambiguous hint that there might be some truth to the supernatural suppositions. I wonder if that means we'll have some straight-up mystery installments with no sci-fi, fantasy, or horror elements.
Devil had one pretty glaring anachronism. It's set in the 1890s, apparently, but the Secretary encases Jago's feet in cement, a method he attributes to Al Capone -- who was born in 1899! Although since this is in the Doctor Who universe, I wonder whether that's just a failure of research or a hint that the recurring baddie Doctor Tulp is a time traveler. Although there's another internal anachronism -- at one point, Jago says he's no Sherlock Holmes, and later, Litefoot spouts a longer-winded version of Holmes's "When you eliminate the impossible" maxim and it's suggested that he might condense it into a pithier version. If Holmes is a known entity, then surely so is his maxim.
I had issued with the lack of continuity in another way, since it was weird in Devil to see Litefoot being so dismissive of the possibility of vampires when he'd dealt with a werewolf or something of the sort in the immediately previous story. But it's an interesting contrast -- Soldier was a straight-up fantasy-horror premise, while Devil ended up having a mundane "it was all a scam" resolution with an ambiguous hint that there might be some truth to the supernatural suppositions. I wonder if that means we'll have some straight-up mystery installments with no sci-fi, fantasy, or horror elements.
Devil had one pretty glaring anachronism. It's set in the 1890s, apparently, but the Secretary encases Jago's feet in cement, a method he attributes to Al Capone -- who was born in 1899! Although since this is in the Doctor Who universe, I wonder whether that's just a failure of research or a hint that the recurring baddie Doctor Tulp is a time traveler. Although there's another internal anachronism -- at one point, Jago says he's no Sherlock Holmes, and later, Litefoot spouts a longer-winded version of Holmes's "When you eliminate the impossible" maxim and it's suggested that he might condense it into a pithier version. If Holmes is a known entity, then surely so is his maxim.