New fiction, reviews, tea, and so on.
  • Celestial Toyroom Issue 552

    Purchase the latest issue of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society's official zine, or download a free copy! My contributions to this issue include thoughts on The Story and the Engine, musings on the state of the series after the Disney+ deal, and a review of the new novel Fear Death by Water.

  • THE BLACK ARCHIVE #80: Mawdryn Undead

    At long last, my second entry in Obverse's Black Archive range is available for pre-order! Grab my book on Fifth Doctor serial Mawdryn Undead for thoughts on Turlough's role as a companion, the curse of immortality, depictions of mental health in sci-fi media, and much more.

  • VERY BRITISH FUTURES: Codename: Icarus

    I return to Gareth Preston's podcast alongside fellow guest Nicky Smalley. Together, the three of us discuss an 80s Cold War thriller featuring some familiar faces. Be sure to check out other episodes on the channel, including my other guest spot discussing Space: 1999!

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

 


As I was getting everything together to write this up, I saw this book listed as "announced August 2022 but delayed extensively." And friends, that is fair.

My Black Archive on Mawdryn Undead was commissioned ages ago, right in the midst of me attempting to be able to write again. That's a long story, probably one for another time. But it is a bit odd to see that people are paying attention to what I say I'll do and what I ought to be doing. Thank you, I guess?

All that aside. Yes, I have a new Black Archive coming out this month, this one on Mawdryn Undead. It's up for pre-order, or perhaps indeed for regular ordering by the time this post goes out (at which point I will be in London for a week and a half). It would be fabulous of you to pick up a copy.

So, for the people who have no idea what's going on. What's Mawdryn Undead, what's the Black Archive, why any of this?

So the Black Archive is a series of book-length studies of Doctor Who stories from all across the show's run. These are heavily researched, and the goal is always to present an in-depth look at these episodes. The angle will depend on the writer. Some write more about society and culture surrounding the series, some dive into the production, some go fully academic about themes and philosophy. As of this year, I'm an editor on the series (with Stuart Douglas, Philip Purser-Hallard, and Paul Driscoll also on board and having been on board for much longer).

Mawdryn Undead came out in 1983, and it's a fifth Doctor serial that introduces companion Turlough and kicks off the Black Guardian Trilogy. I've always had a soft spot for this serial and, after working on a Black Archive on Heaven Sent several years ago, I wanted to approach a 20th century story. The funny thing is, I don't think the version I would have written a few years ago would be the same as the one I did recently, even though I kept to the topics of my pitch. Between personal experiences and the context provided by the more recent seasons of Doctor Who, there's a lot that wouldn't have been present (or as clear) in an earlier version.

So what does get covered? Turlough's role as a companion, and indeed what the role of a companion is. The Brigadier's paradox-induced amnesia and how it parallels PTSD. The lottery of regeneration and how this episode uses that uncertainty in its story. The history of "ghost ships," including the one that inspired this story. Time paradoxes and how Mawdryn Undead added a new twist to the inherent paradox of Doctor Who. And, of course, the curse of immortality.

All that said, I'd love it if you grabbed a copy and let me know what you think. And treat yourself and go through the other Archives. As of mine, there are 80, covering every Doctor and even a few more obscure contributions. Plus, we've just had a fantastic run of pitches and have some great future Archives stacked up.

Do I have another Archive in future? I'm already working on it. I'll just leave you to guess which I'm going for next. In the meantime, keep an eye on the series, because the next few books are looking to be especially fun!


3:00 AM   Posted by Kara Dennison in , with No comments
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Monday, December 1, 2025


NANA 25th ANNIVERSARY EDITION,
Vol. 2
by Ai Yazawa
Available December 2

NANA has become something of a mainstay in the worlds of both manga and fashion. Ai Yazawa's influence is massive, with collabs far and wide for the manga's 25th anniversary. And, of course, the new anniversary edition of the manga is also available. It goes without saying — this is glorious. But I'm going to say it anyway.

Volume 2 clocks in at 376 pages, continuing the comedic and romantic adventures of odd couple Nana and Hachi (also called Nana). The volume also includes bonus chapters with reader questions and commentary from Yazawa.

If you've never encountered NANA before, these anniversary volumes are the perfect approach. Yazawa's gorgeous art is reprinted beautifully, and the translation remains solid. And on a re-read of the series, it's no wonder this manga has struck a chord with so many young people. Through the eyes of the two Nanas, we witness the many facets of becoming an adult, and in turn becoming your own person. How much space should someone else hold in your life? How do you cope with love that's passed, love that isn't returned, or love you shouldn't chase? While the chance meeting between Nana K. and Nana O. has definitely changed their lives forever, it's the secondary characters who really bring everything together.

Anything by Ai Yazawa is a fantastic read, but there's a reason NANA has achieved this level of renown and longevity. Its intersection of music and fashion is a perfect setting for self-discovery, and these two similar-but-different characters continue to bring out interesting new sides of each other. Take this opportunity to see what all the hype is about.


TEA PAIRING: Edgar Allan Poe Tea Bundle
This is another reading selection that feels like it needs two teas. The strong, intense Poet's Study (one of my personal favorites) and the sweet, dreamy Dream Within a Dream are perfect matches for Nana and Hachi. Use my code KARA15 for 15% off this and other book-inspired teas!

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Friday, November 28, 2025

 


In the influx of gingerbread and peppermint flavored everything at this time of year (both of which I love!), one seasonal flavor tends to get underutilized. Simple sugar cookies are one of my favorite treats at this time of year, so I'm always delighted when a café or tea seller figures that into their seasonal blends. To that end, Chapters has added a decaf holiday blend to their listing: Sugar Cookie Gifts, a new take on rooibos for Christmas.

This new flavor takes its inspiration from the March family's cozy holiday in Little Women. Caffeine-free rooibos tea is paired with vanilla, honey, cinnamon, and rose petals to evoke Christmas cookies baking in the kitchen. And if you're trying to cut down on caffeine without cutting out cozy seasonal vibes, this could be a good alternative.

I've said this before, but it bears mentioning: I am very picky about rooibos. I'm one of that very small subset of people who tends to get a cough syrup taste off straight-up rooibos, so I put a lot of stock in good strong flavor to mask or otherwise temper that. So if you're like me and a little more sensitive to rooibos taste, you can trust me. We're the same, you and me.


Honey is the first scent to hit you when you open the bag, which is a pleasant surprise. I had a Bridgerton tea with a honey flavor profile, and I've been chasing that ever since. While it is the most forward scent, the honey blends into the overall flavor once this is steeped up, making for a very nice cookie flavor.

The medicine-y rooibos isn't
fully masked, but it's definitely downplayed, to the point that the sugar cookie is first and foremost. I was surprised at the rose inclusion, since I'm a big fan of rose and generally immediately taste it anywhere it's used. But it sinks backward into the blend in a nice way, and I suspect that's a big part of what helps to even out the flavor.

I've only had this hot without milk or sugar, but I suspect this would make an excellent latte if steeped up strong enough. However you make it, I recommend serving it with Christmas cookies. It complements them perfectly.

Sugar Cookie Gifts is only available for a limited time. Use my code KARA15 for 15% off this and other teas from Chapters!

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Wednesday, November 26, 2025

 


FADE INTO YOU
by Amber Smith & Sam Gellar
Available now

The year is 1999, and teenagers Bird and Jessa are having multiple unique issues of their own when it comes to family and love. But these two strangers have one thing in common: their best friends are dating. As Bird watches Kayla start to act like an entirely different person, Jessa watches Dade become less and less interested in their usual music and movie get-togethers. After a rocky start, Bird and Jessa become uneasy allies in a shared venture: break up the new couple.

As they work together to sabotage the romance, however, they begin to get closer themselves. Jessa is a lesbian who happens to have been outed unceremoniously by Bird's stepsister, and Bird had summer romances with both a boy and a girl. Over time, they begin to catch feelings for each other. But between their uneasy ongoing friendships with Dade and Kayla, their troubles at home, and Jessa's fear of Bird suffering the same bullying she has at school, it isn't smooth sailing. As New Year's Eve (and Y2K) approaches, both will have to come to terms with how they navigate love and friendships.

Reading Fade Into You was an interesting exercise, since I was the same age as the protagonists in the year the novel takes place. From a nostalgia standpoint, it was a bit odd. The slang was anachronistic, with the majority of the attempts to place the story in time being dedicated to what movies were playing and what bands were popular with different demographics. A lot of the attempts at integrating this into dialogue felt odd (one character telling another she "let [her] fingers do the walking" when asked how she found a phone number). At the same time, there didn't seem to be any attempts to have the characters speak like 90s characters. If anything, the dialogue felt oddly modern. All of this feels strange considering at least one of the two authors is, according to a bit of quick research, of the same sort of age as Bird and Jessa.

And here is where I'm divided on Fade Into You. Placing Bird and Jessa's story right on the edge of Y2K — a time when everyone feared the collapse of the world, but the world moved on, thanks to quiet hard work under the surface — is extremely pleasing on a symbolic level. Too, taking young readers outside the discourse-driven world of 2025 to a time when discussions on mental health and sexuality were a mess is a good and important thing to do. In that respect, the book gets things absolutely right. One of the book's subplots, following Jessa's sister Mack and her struggle with BPD, mirrors the stigma I personally recall surrounding not so much having a mental illness as being seen to have a mental illness.

The short version is, Fall Into You is an excellent story (more specifically, two good character pieces) couched in a world that is the 90s socially while feeling like a 90s replica culturally and aesthetically. For the book's demographic, this might be the way to go. For all I know, a teenager would not be able to take a book seriously if the characters talked the way we actually did back then. If you're looking for a throwback to the era you lived in, this isn't the book for you. But if you're looking for a turbulent love story that also happens to have strong message about how to care for others while looking after yourself, it's a strong yes.


TEA PAIRING: Sugar and Spice Chai Tea Bundle
Normally I pair books with one tea, but Chapters' new chai bundle fits the central couple of Fade Into You perfectly. A combo of sweet, bookish Vanilla Chai (for Bird) and strong, bold Spice Chai Mélange (for Jessa), this bundle also comes with a basket steeper and quill spoon. Use my code KARA15 for 15% off this and other orders from Chapters!

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Monday, November 24, 2025




GAMERA -REBIRTH-: CODE THYRSOS
Vol. 1
by Hiroyuki Seshita and Cambria Bakuhatsu Taro
Available November 25

Like many, my first exposure to the kaiju legend that is Gamera was Mystery Science Theater 3000. Seeing the giant turtle beast make an honest-to-goodness comeback in recent years has been a lot of fun. And seeing that comeback extend to the world of manga, just two days before the franchise's 60th anniversary, is even better.

If you haven't seen Gamera -Rebirth-, you won't be completely in the dark. Heck, you won't be in the dark if you don't know a thing about the original monster. But if you know your kaiju, you're in for a treat as you watch them emerge in the world of this manga.

This prequel series takes place 100,000 years in the past, in the highly-advanced civilization of Elisitania. The upper echelons fight their battles using specially-manufacted kaiju. Protagonist Lucius watched his own father die in one such battle, and has been left scarred after protecting his sister Sica. Now, he's out for revenge — he plans to overthrow then entire system by immersing himself in the same research that tore his family apart.

While there are big monster fights to be had, and this story does indeed give us a backstory for the creature known as Gamera, this could easily be a stand-alone science fantasy. Cambria Bakuhatsu Taro's art is gorgeous, and the world of Elisitania will appeal to fans of high-tech historical legends like Atlantis. It's a very different approach to kaiju fiction, even in an era when kaiju fiction is going in all sorts of new directions, and it's as fun to look at as it is to read.


TEA PAIRING: Spice Chai Mélange
This sci-fi-inspired blend from Chapters evokes far-off times and places and massive beasts... just like Code Thyrsos! It's a spicy rooibos chai that's great for any time of day, especially for those of us trying to lower our caffeine intake. Use my code KARA15 for 15% off this and other teas from Chapters!

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Sunday, November 23, 2025

 


"My grades are good," I say loudly into the empty stairwell. "Grades are... great. I think I'm on track to ace my finals for the semester, actually."

There are, according to campus legend, a few ways to rile the ghost on the third floor of the English building. The main way is by being a good student... or, rather, by being open about being a good student. That makes her mad enough to appear and, sometimes, attack.

Hers was the boilerplate campus ghost story: honor-roll student dating a football player, he broke up with her, her life fell apart, she ended it all by jumping out that window there. I'm sure, if I asked students at other colleges, they'd have an identical version mapped out against a different building.

But that's not the point right now. The point is it's almost midnight, I'm in the stairwell just outside the third floor, and I have a ghost to piss off.

"Got friends," I add, since she also hates when people have a healthy social life. "I actually have friends who like to be around me. It's great."

I wipe at my eyes.

"So, you know. Things are going fantastic. No regrets."

And now, time to lock it in with the sentence that allegedly drives our ghost friend absolutely batshit. Never mind that it's not true. Never mind that, as of right now, I'm really not thinking about the future past this night. I've been lying my ass off 'til now, so what's one more?

"I think this might be my best semester yet."

The air pressure seems to drop all at once, sending me a little dizzy. There's a scraping sound from somewhere deep within the building... not on the third floor, not in the offices that were once the study room the ghost allegedly haunted. Further down. I feel it more than I hear it. A heavy, lurching noise, like someone dragging something large across metal.

You know that childhood memory that we all seem to have even though it can't possibly be real? That feeling of sailing down flights of steps, practically flying, feet barely touching as your hand grazes the banister? I swear I'm doing that, the worn souls of my sneakers barely skimming the metal-capped marble steps as I circle down the flight of stairs. It's not far — three stories in an Old Campus building is squat and scalable compared to the buildings on New Campus — but I still can't outrun the noise. By the time I'm in the atrium, windowed double doors separating me from the darkness of campus, the sound has come to a final decisive thump.

And it's on the floor below me.

There is a lower floor in the English building, but no one but English majors really has a need (or a desire) to go down there. The basement houses the archives, but it's nothing special unless you're writing a very narrowly focused paper for a literature class. Old theses and dissertations from past students, literary journals, alternate translations of epic poems, that sort of thing. Barely anyone goes down there for understandable reasons; there's certainly not anything down there that literally goes bump in the night. Unless, of course, there is. Unless it's her, and the rumors have gotten everything right except the floor she chooses to haunt.

The basement is down a separate stairwell at the back of the building. I stare at the door leading to the stairs, thinking about the cacophony that had just resounded beneath my feet. I don't know what ghosts are meant to sound like. They probably aren't meant to sound like a whole bit of world rearranging. It could be something, someone dangerous. But would that be so bad? Would the end result not be the same?

So I descend, slower this time, walking rather than flying. Not cautiously. Just dully. I swipe my ID card, listen for the click of the lock releasing, and pull the door open.

"Just squeeze around the side," a voice from beyond the blue box says. "Sorry, there's not really anywhere to park in here."

Maybe on some other night, I'd try to wrap my head around the fact that a giant wooden shed, phone booth sized and phone booth shaped, is blocking my way. But I do as the voice suggests, squeezing around it, and the door of the archives swings shut behind me. I look at it from the other side, the words POLICE PUBLIC CALL BOX emblazoned across the top. It reminds me of the emergency campus police posts along the walking paths, little poles every few yards with a speaker in the side and a blue light perched on top, ready to summon help. I think back to last night, walking a back trail alone, wondering what asking for help might do for me. The nearest pole mocked me with an "OUT OF ORDER" sign. Underneath, someone had scrawled "KEEP RUNNING" in ball-point pen.

"An extra pair of hands will make this go more quickly," the voice goes on. It's English, gentle but assured, the sort of voice suited to reading audiobooks of Victorian tragedies. "Check those shelves over there."

I look up, and I see the speaker. Maybe it's my sudden immersion in English major life, but nothing about him strikes me as especially strange. A shoulder-length mop of hair, green velvet jacket, silk cravat pinned just so to flow into a matching waistcoat. Once your Shakespeare professor shows up for a 7am class yellow-stockinged and cross-gartered, nothing surprises you, I guess.

"These?" I point vaguely to the shelf to my right, which is filled with dissertations: some leather-bound, some ring-bound, some stapled.

The man looks up at me, beaming like an old friend. He nods, sending his messy locks bouncing briefly. "That's the one." And he turns back to the shelf he's perusing, fingers flying across the spines. "We're looking for Y Gododdin. Three D's. Not the actual poem, of course. A paper on it."

"Right." I don't actually remember agreeing to help him, but I also don't see a reason not to.

"Bit late at night to be doing research," he says pleasantly, still skimming through documents. It's conversational, not accusatory, and I'm not used to that. Where I grew up, how I grew up, every statement is layered with meaning, and every layer is a slightly different flavor of "You've done something wrong." I hear it at parties, I hear it in classrooms, whether it's intended or not. Somehow this stranger has fully avoided that, and for a moment I don't know how not to feel accused. Like it's my fault I'm missing the implication.

Apologizing isn't right here because he doesn't appear to be accusing, so I go for my second-string coping mechanism: humor. "Time's pretty meaningless on a college campus."

He chuckles. "Fair enough." He looks up at me, away, and up again. As though realizing for the first time that I'm here and he doesn't know me. "So sorry, I've gotten used to having someone around, I just took it for granted. I'm the Doctor."

"Which one?" There are more PhD's in the science-based departments, but I think we might have one or two.

"One of several," he says simply, and that's fair.

I introduce myself. First name only. He says it back to me, and it sounds so much nicer when he says it. I've never really been fond of my name, but now I'm starting to wonder if it's more that I'm not a fan of the tone most people say it in. I'm used to it being invoked only when something goes wrong, and otherwise never said at all. He says it like it's worth remembering.

"I thought I'd met all the professors in the department," I say, moving over a few shelves. Y Gododdin is Welsh poetry. I should be looking in a section broadly covering that sort of thing. "Are you new?"

"Oh, I don't work here," he says pleasantly.

"Then how did you get in?"

He gestures to the police box. "Usual way."

I have no idea what to make of this, even with my growing acceptance of campus oddities. I turn away to think it over, to decide where this all fits in my mind right now, and my hand rests on the spine of a leather-bound document. Y Gododdin: A Model for the Modern Heroic Elegy. "Is this it?"

The Doctor crosses the room to meet me, his swift step out of tune with his appearance. He's closer now, and harder to avoid looking at. As he pulls the dissertation off the shelf and leafs through it, I consider him. About my height. Age... thirties? Maybe? I'm terrible with guessing ages. He could be younger, or much, much older. And there's a lightness about him. Like a sad poet who suddenly remembered that there are nice things in the world and is absolutely bursting with the notion. Even now, he's clutching the dissertation like it's a birthday present.

"Yes! This is the one! Perfect, thank you." He beams at me. Then, like a puppy with too many inputs, all of them equally exciting, he shuffles briefly in place before hurrying to a battered doctor's bag on the floor nearby and tucking the book inside. "I'll return it once I'm done with it," he says, to me or to the air, I'm not sure.

"For research?" I ask, and even as the words leave my mouth I feel stupid. No, silly, for a bit of light reading. Obviously.

"Just to show it to someone," he says, rummaging in the bag a bit more. "Sometimes, people need to see what will be, to help them decide to keep going. Which reminds me." And he pulls out another book: smaller, paper-bound, and very new. The cover is black with colorful swirls. He holds it out to me, still kneeling by the bag. When I don't move, he shakes it a bit, encouragingly.

I take the book from his hands, peering at the title. I don't recognize it. But I recognize the author.

It's my name. Well, sort of my name. The first name is mine. But the last is one I've mulled around in my head for a while: one that's easier to pronounce on sight, that sounds less "ethnic," that wasn't "comically" mispronounced by prank callers and my grandfather's coworkers during the Gulf War. I told myself if I ever became an actress, or a writer, or something that gave me worth, that would be the name I used. The key word being myself. I hadn't told anyone else.

I start to open the book, but the Doctor takes it back gently. "Ah... best you not look inside."

"How..." I blink at this stranger with his blue box, with a book that can't exist, with a name I've been guarding in my mind.

"There are a few of these," he says casually. "And others."

If it's a prank, it's an amazing one, and I don't think anyone would fault me for letting myself lean into it. "Do they mean anything?"

"Everything means something to someone." He snaps the bag shut and hops to his feet. "Everything is someone's favorite something. And that means everything, don't you think?"

"What are you actually doing here?" I ask.

The Doctor walks over to the big blue box, opening the door. "Same as you," he says cheerfully. "Ghost hunting. Except I prefer to leave behind a little more than footprints." He pats the bag. "Now if you'll excuse me, I have another young lady to speak to."

He closes the door, and I watch the blue light on top of the box illuminate, hear the scraping of metal, and the box fades away. And then I walk back to the dorm and slide into bed, any previous plans forgotten.

Maybe it's a dream, and maybe it's not. Maybe that Doctor really did slip backwards in time and showed another young woman on the edge that she not only graduated, she threw her whole heart and mind into something. And maybe something about it would mean as much to her as mine did to me, and the legends of the ghost on the third floor would vanish, replaced with one of the other dozen ghost stories that haunt the campus.

Or maybe I'll wake up tomorrow and realize I went to bed sad, and my subconscious patched things up with characters from a video I borrowed from the boy down the hall. (I should borrow some more.)

But I'm not sure that matters. What matters is that the Doctor finds you and leaves you changed, whether it's during an alien invasion in your hometown or on the worst night of your life through a little television stacked on top of packing crates. And ideally, we are better for it.

3:00 AM   Posted by Kara Dennison in , with No comments
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