The Aztecs (novelisation): Difference between revisions
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* The novelisation dates the story as [[1507]]. | * The novelisation dates the story as [[1507]]. | ||
* Aztec culture is elaborated on. | * Aztec culture is elaborated on. | ||
* Ian discovers the skeleton of Ixta's father secret passage. | * Ian discovers the skeleton of Ixta's father in the secret passage. | ||
* [[Ixta]] is said to be [[Topau]]'s grandson, instead of his son. | * [[Ixta]] is said to be [[Topau]]'s grandson, instead of his son. | ||
* There is no fight between Ixta and Ian on the pyramid, but instead Ian shines the Doctor's torch in Ixta's face, stunning him, causing him to fall off the pyramid. | * There is no fight between Ixta and Ian on the pyramid, but instead Ian shines the Doctor's torch in Ixta's face, stunning him, causing him to fall off the pyramid. |
Revision as of 13:45, 20 October 2015
The Aztecs was a novelisation based on the 1964 television serial The Aztecs.
Publisher's summary
1984 edition
The TARDIS materialises in Mexico during the Aztecs civilisation. The Doctor and his companions step outside to discover they are inside a tomb - the tomb, it turns out, of Yetaxa, once High Priest of the Aztecs.
Barbara is hailed as Yetaxa’s reincarnation by Autloc, High Priest of Knowledge, and Tlotoxl, High Priest of Sacrifice, when they find her in the precincts of the tomb wearing the bracelet of the deceased Priest, now revered as a god.
And she takes advantage of her position of unaccustomed power to try and dissuade the Aztecs from practising human sacrifice…
1992 edition
The Doctor stood up. "There's to be a human sacrifice at sunset," he said. "Ian is to escort the chosen victim to the altar."
When the Doctor, Susan, Ian and Barbara arrive accidentally in ancient Mexico, Barbara is mistaken for a god by the Aztecs. Horrified by the barbarous practice of human sacrifice which she is forced to observe, she is determined to use her power to prevent such atrocities from ever happening again. The Doctor must use every means in his power to prevent her from interfering with the natural course of history, but he himself is occupied by other matters - such as the rather attractive Cameca...
This is a novelization by John Lucarotti of his own television story, first broadcast in 1964 and featuring William Hartnell as the first Doctor.
TARGET DOCTOR WHO NOVELIZATIONS 8 MILLION COPIES SOLD
Chapter Titles
- Coiled Serpent
- Yetaxa the God
- The Chosen Warriors
- Sacrifice to Tlaloc
- The Perfect Victim
- The Thorn of Doom
- No Holds Barred
- Cups of Cocoa
- The Bride of Sacrifice
- Offence and Retribution
- Crawl, Swim, Climb
- Wall of Deception
- False God
- The Day of Darkness
- Eclipse
Deviations from televised story
- The novelisation dates the story as 1507.
- Aztec culture is elaborated on.
- Ian discovers the skeleton of Ixta's father in the secret passage.
- Ixta is said to be Topau's grandson, instead of his son.
- There is no fight between Ixta and Ian on the pyramid, but instead Ian shines the Doctor's torch in Ixta's face, stunning him, causing him to fall off the pyramid.
Writing and publishing notes
- John Lucarotti extensively rewrote the teleplay for this novelisation of his own story.
- This was the last book to be published featuring the colour version of the Target Books logo. The book published just prior to this one, the novelisation of Warriors of the Deep, had introduced a new white-outline version of the logo.
Additional cover images
To be added
British publication history
First publication:
- Hardback
- W.H.Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
- Paperback
- Target
Re-issues:
- Paperback
- Virgin Publishing Ltd. UK October 1992 Cover by Andrew Skilleter (£2.50 UK)
Audiobook
This Target Book was released complete and unabridged by BBC Audio and read by William Russell.
The audio set of four CDs was released in August 2012 priced £13.99 (UK)