The Lost Boy (novelisation): Difference between revisions

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* The house that the Stafford family was supposed to live in was [[26 Chalsey Grove]].
* The house that the Stafford family was supposed to live in was [[26 Chalsey Grove]].
* [[Brendan Richards]] was still working in [[Silicon Valley]].
* [[Brendan Richards]] was still working in [[Silicon Valley]].
* In [[Ashley Stafford]]'s room ther were posters of footballers, [[In-Demand]] and [[UNIT 4]].
* In [[Ashley Stafford]]'s room there were posters of footballers, [[In-Demand]] and [[UNIT 4]].
* [[Nathan Goss]] was a fan of the [[Everton]] football club.
* [[Nathan Goss]] was a fan of the [[Everton]] football club.
* [[Clyde Langer]] got [[Luke Smith]] into [[Kasabian]], next he wanted to show him the music of the [[Arctic Monkeys]].
* [[Clyde Langer]] got [[Luke Smith]] into [[Kasabian]], next he wanted to show him the music of the [[Arctic Monkeys]].

Revision as of 19:16, 11 October 2015

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The Lost Boy was released in November 2008, a full year after the last release of novelisations. It adapts The Lost Boy, the final regular serial of The Sarah Jane Adventures first series. With its release, all episodes of the first season have been adapted. It is the first time a complete season of a Doctor Who-related series had been fully adapted in novelisation form within a year of original broadcast.

Publisher's summary

Life on Earth can be an adventure, too. You just need to know where to look.

Sarah Jane is shocked to see an appeal on television by distraught parents of a missing boy — Luke, her adopted son! She is accused of kidnapping him and has to hand Luke over to his "real" parents. But something doesn't seem right. With the help of her friends, Maria, Clyde and Alan, Sarah Jane uncovers a sinister alien plot and a shocking truth about a loyal "friend"...

Characters

References

Deviations from the televised story

  • The novelisation features a specially written prologue. It describes how the Goss family gets killed by the Slitheen and how their skin suits are used to create the fictional Heidi and Jay Stafford. It is described from Mrs Townsend's point of view.

Continuity

prose stub