Short Trips: Snapshots

Short Trips: Snapshots is a Big Finish original anthology edited by Joseph Lidster and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. The collection explores the effect that the Doctor has on the lives of those he meets.

Short Trips: Snapshots
AuthorJoseph Lidster
SeriesDoctor Who book:
Big Finish Short Trips
Release number
21
PublisherBig Finish Productions
Publication date
June 2007
ISBN1-84435-267-6
Preceded byShort Trips: Destination Prague 
Followed byShort Trips: The Ghosts of Christmas 

Stories

TitleAuthorDoctorFeaturing
GolemLizzie Hopley2nd
Indian SummerJames Goss1stSusan
All of BeyondHelen Raynor2ndJamie
The Eyes Have ItColin Harvey6thMel
The Misadventure of Mark ThorneAndy Frankham5thTurlough
AttachmentsScott Handcock4thOliver
There's Something About MarySimon Guerrier5th, 6th and 7th
My HeroStuart Manning4th
Plight of the MonkrahJohn Davies4thOliver
Remain in LightEddie Robson8thLucie
In Case of EmergenciesIan Farrington4th
PuppeteerBenjamin Adams4thOliver
OsskahGary Owen8th
PiecemealJames Swallow5thTurlough
The ReportGary Russell7thAce & Hex
You Had Me at Verify User Name and PasswordStel PavlouThe Doctor
She KnewNigel Fairs3rd
The Glarn StrategyBrian Dooley4thRomana
Salva MeaJoseph Lidster8thCharley & C'rizz
The Sorrows of ViennaSteven Savile8th
FanboysPaul MagrsDoctor Who

Notes

  • The collection features the first appearance of companion Lucie Miller in print.
  • Colin Harvey was commissioned following his success in a writing competition organised by SFX magazine.[1]
gollark: If you want more, YOU are to write it.
gollark: As you can see, centre-justification follows from the combination of left- and right-justification.
gollark: Left-justification:> Left-wing politics supports social equality and egalitarianism, often in critique of social hierarchy.[1][2][3][4] Left-wing politics typically involves a concern for those in society whom its adherents perceive as disadvantaged relative to others as well as a belief that there are unjustified inequalities that need to be reduced or abolished.[1] According to emeritus professor of economics Barry Clark, left-wing supporters "claim that human development flourishes when individuals engage in cooperative, mutually respectful relations that can thrive only when excessive differences in status, power, and wealth are eliminated."[5] No language (except esoteric apioforms) *truly* lacks generics. Typically, they have generics, but limited to a few "blessed" built-in data types; in C, arrays and pointers; in Go, maps, slices and channels. This of course creates vast inequality between the built-in types and the compiler writers and the average programmers with their user-defined data types, which cannot be generic. Typically, users of the language are forced to either manually monomorphise, or use type-unsafe approaches such as `void*`. Both merely perpetuate an unjust system which must be abolished.
gollark: Anyway, center-justify... centrism is about being precisely in the middle of the left and right options. I will imminently left-justify it, so centre-justification WILL follow.
gollark: Social hierarchies are literal hierarchies.

References


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