The Doctor's last three visits to the scattered human colonies of the third millennium have not been entirely successful. And now that Ace has rejoined him and Bernice, life on board the TARDIS is getting pretty stressful. The Doctor yearns for a simpler time and place: Earth, the tropics, the early twentieth century.
The TARDIS lands in Haiti in the early years of the First World War. The Doctor, Bernice, and Ace land in a murderous plot involving voodoo, violent death, zombies and German spies. And perhaps something else—something far, far worse.
Reception
In 1994, Science Fiction Chronicle's Don D'Ammassa critiqued the novel as ""[a] very different tone for the Doctor that works some of the time, but occasionally fails to ring true to the character."[1]
References
^D'Ammassa, Don (January 1994). "Review: White Darkness by David A. McIntee". Science Fiction Chronicle. New York, NY: Algol Press.