Running Through Corridors: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Reference Book | {{Infobox Reference Book | ||
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|name= Running Through Corridors | |name= Running Through Corridors | ||
|image=Corridors.jpg | |image=Corridors.jpg | ||
|writer=[[Robert Shearman]] and [[Toby Hadoke]] | |writer=[[Robert Shearman]] and [[Toby Hadoke]] | ||
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* [http://madnorwegian.com/262/books/running-through-corridors-rob-and-tobys-marathon-watch-of-doctor-who-vol-1-the-60s/ Mad Norwegian - 'Running Through Corridors: Vol 1'] | * [http://madnorwegian.com/262/books/running-through-corridors-rob-and-tobys-marathon-watch-of-doctor-who-vol-1-the-60s/ Mad Norwegian - 'Running Through Corridors: Vol 1'] | ||
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[[Category:Doctor Who analysis books]] | [[Category:Doctor Who analysis books]] |
Revision as of 02:54, 14 May 2015
Unlike other fictional universes, the Doctor Who universe is created solely by fiction. To us, this is not a valid source. Information from this source can only be used in "behind the scenes" sections, or on pages about real world topics.
Running Through Corridors: Rob and Toby's Marathon Watch of Doctor Who is a three-volume book written by Robert Shearman and Toby Hadoke and published by Mad Norwegian Press.
Volume 1 - The 60s was released in 2010, with Volume 2 - The 70s anticipated for a late 2011 release, and Volume 3 - The 80s to follow.
Publisher's summary
In Running Through Corridors, two Doctor Who lovers of old – Robert Shearman and Toby Hadoke – embark on an epic quest of friendship: spend the "gap year" of 2009 (when Doctor Who consisted of a handful of specials rather than a full season) re-watching the whole of Who two episodes a day, every day, from the show’s start in 1963 and ending with David Tennant’s swan song on New Year’s, 2010.
This three-volume series contains Shearman and Hadoke’s diary of that experience – a grand opus of their wry observations about the show, their desire to see the good in every story, and their chronicle of the real-life changes to Who in that year.
Subject matter
Shearman and Hadoke document their thoughts in diary format on a day-by-day basis, covering all televised stories featuring the first ten Doctors, as well as the Peter Cushing films.