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{{pullout|{{rename|The Evil of the Daleks (2023 novelisation)|the year makes the disambigation more clear, plus the old version should be dabbed with its year as well}}}}
{{retitle|''The Evil of the Daleks'' (2023 novelisation)}}
{{you may|The Evil of the Daleks (novelisation)|n1=the 1993 novelisation}}
{{retitle|''The Evil of the Daleks'' (BBC Books novelisation)}}
{{real world}}
{{real world}}
{{Infobox Story SMW
{{Infobox Story SMW
|name            = ''The Evil of the Daleks''
|name            = ''The Evil of the Daleks''
|novelisation of = The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)
|novelisation of = The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)
|image          = The Evil of the Daleks (2023 hardback).jpg
|image          = <gallery>
The Evil of the Daleks (2023 hardback).jpg|Hardback
The Evil of the Daleks (2024 paperback).jpg|Paperback
</gallery>
|series          = [[BBC Books novelisation]]s
|series          = [[BBC Books novelisation]]s
|main character  = [[Jamie McCrimmon|Jamie]]
|main character  = [[Jamie McCrimmon|Jamie]]
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|read by        = Frazer Hines, [[Nicholas Briggs]]
|read by        = Frazer Hines, [[Nicholas Briggs]]
|publisher      = BBC Books
|publisher      = BBC Books
|release date    = 26 October 2023
|publisher2      = Target Books
|publisher3      = Doctor Who Magazine{{!}}''Doctor Who Magazine'' (de facto)
|release date    = 26 October 2023 (hardback)
|release date2  = 10 October 2024 (paperback)
|cover          =  
|cover          =  
|format          =  
|format          =  
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|prev            = Doctor Who and the Library of Time (anthology)
|prev            = Doctor Who and the Library of Time (anthology)
|next            = The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)
|next            = The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)
}}{{prose stub}}
}}{{prose stub}} {{you may|The Evil of the Daleks (novelisation)|n1=the 1993 novelisation}}
'''''The Evil of the Daleks''''' was a novelisation based on the [[1967 (releases)|1967]] television serial {{cs|The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)}}. It was [[Writer|written]] by [[Frazer Hines]], [[Mike Tucker]] and [[Steve Cole]] and released by [[BBC Books]] on [[26 October (releases)|26 October]] [[2023 (releases)|2023]]. It was the second such official novelisation following the [[The Evil of the Daleks (novelisation)|original]] and justified itself as, in essence, a novelisation of the [[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)#Repeat transmission|1968 televised repeat]] of the original TV serial, making use of the framing device of [[Zoe Heriot]] being shown the events of the earlier adventure on a [[mind projector]] shortly after joining [[the Doctor's TARDIS]].
'''''The Evil of the Daleks''''' was a novelisation based on the [[1967 (releases)|1967]] television serial {{cs|The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)}}. It was [[Writer|written]] by [[Frazer Hines]], [[Mike Tucker]] and [[Steve Cole]] and released by [[BBC Books]] on [[26 October (releases)|26 October]] [[2023 (releases)|2023]]. It was the second such official novelisation following the [[The Evil of the Daleks (novelisation)|original]] and justified itself as, in essence, a novelisation of the [[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)#Repeat transmission|1968 televised repeat]] of the original TV serial, making use of the framing device of [[Zoe Heriot]] being shown the events of the earlier adventure on a [[mind projector]] shortly after joining [[the Doctor's TARDIS]].
The novelisation was re-released as a paperback by [[Target Books]] and included for free with [[DWM 609|issue 609]] of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' on [[10 October (releases)|10 October]] [[2024 (releases)|2024]].


== Publisher's summary ==
== Publisher's summary ==

Latest revision as of 09:17, 10 October 2024

RealWorld.png

prose stub
You may be looking for the 1993 novelisation.

The Evil of the Daleks was a novelisation based on the 1967 television serial The Evil of the Daleks [+]Loading...["The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)"]. It was written by Frazer Hines, Mike Tucker and Steve Cole and released by BBC Books on 26 October 2023. It was the second such official novelisation following the original and justified itself as, in essence, a novelisation of the 1968 televised repeat of the original TV serial, making use of the framing device of Zoe Heriot being shown the events of the earlier adventure on a mind projector shortly after joining the Doctor's TARDIS.

The novelisation was re-released as a paperback by Target Books and included for free with issue 609 of Doctor Who Magazine on 10 October 2024.

Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]

Young astrophysicist Zoe wishes to join Jamie and the Doctor on their travels. To give her fair warning of the dangers she may face, the Doctor uses a mind projector to share one of their most harrowing adventures...

And so, Jamie is forced to relive his struggle against the evil Daleks at their most powerful and calculating. In a complex plot that drags him from modern-day London to Victorian times and finally to the Dalek world of Skaro, he endures ordeals that test his courage, strength - and his friendship with the Doctor - to the limit...

Chapter titles[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Chapter One: To Set a Trap
First Interlude
  • Chapter Two: The Net Tightens
Second Interlude
  • Chapter Three: A Trial of Strength
Third Interlude
  • Chapter Four: A Test of Skill
Fourth Interlude
  • Chapter Five: The Human Factor
Fifth Interlude
  • Chapter Six: Escape to Danger
Sixth Interlude
  • Chapter Seven: The End of the Daleks
Coda

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

to be added

Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

to be added

Differences from other versions[[edit] | [edit source]]

As with most novelisations, there are notable differences and contradictions in the details with the parent story, although this one provides some possible in-universe justifications given its narrative framing device. In one of the interludes, the Doctor explains that the TARDIS is able to take a psychic recording of nearby events after it lands, allowing him to project events at which he was not present. In the coda, the Doctor also claims to have been testing his memory after a recent bump to the head. The implication that an inaccuracy with either of these could cause some details to be related differently is subtly present.

Additionally, the interludes are narrated by Jamie in the first-person; he and Zoe later had their memories altered, nearly erased, by the Time Lords after The War Games [+]Loading...["The War Games (TV story)"].

Deviations from televised story[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Kennedy is given the first name Frank.
  • The final scene from Episode 2, in which two Daleks discuss the beginning of the experiment and demand there be no delay, is absent.
  • Terrall has further flashbacks to his time in the Crimean War. His Dalek conditioning further confuses these thoughts, causing him to believe he is actually fighting a war of extermination against the Thals.
  • Kemel receives an expanded backstory explaining how he ended up in the employ of Maxtible: he was a wrestler in London who was defended from a murder charge by Maxtible after killing a thief in self-defence.
  • Besides Jamie, the Daleks also factor both Kemel and Victoria into the Human Factor experiment, in order to determine if the traits displayed by Jamie are common across race and gender.
  • Terral, Ruth and Mollie all witness the destruction of Maxtible's house from afar in an additional scene to feature them after their departure.
  • A Black Dalek is present on Skaro, serving as the Emperor's second-in-command, in a role virtually identical to the Black Dalek Leader. However, it is destroyed by the humanised Daleks at the start of the rebellion (other material suggests the Black Dalek Leader survived up until the events of Remembrance of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)"]). No Black Daleks were present in the TV serial, despite the Emperor's black-domed guards being referred to as such.
  • Further detail is given to the history and function of the Dalek City.
  • The characters discuss how the Daleks go to the trouble of genuinely discovering how to transmute metal into gold despite using it as nothing more than a lure to infect Maxtible with the Dalek factor. The Doctor attributes this to spite.
  • Omega is identified as one of the first humanised Daleks to be killed by the Emperor's guards just as the Doctor incites the rebellion.
  • After the Dalek Civil War begins, the Doctor begins hunting for humanised Dalek reinforcements, finding a group of them who are in the process of giving themselves names and scratching them onto their casings.
  • At Kemel's death scene, instead of Maxtible beckoning Kemel towards him as they escape the city and Kemel cautiously complying, Kemel immediately knows not to trust him steps forward to defend Jamie and Victoria from the Dalekised Maxtible, who then attacks him.
  • After killing Kemel, Maxtible gets into a fight with Jamie and falls over the same precipice as Kemel. In the original serial, Maxtible responded to orders for all Daleks to return to the city and implicitly died in the fighting.
  • The Emperor summons all Dalek leaders to put down the rebellion, whereas on TV he specifically summons all Black Dalek Leaders.
  • Greater emphasis is placed on the toll the Doctor's conflicted thoughts and emotions begin to take on him as he drives the Daleks towards genocide, and the deaths that were caused along the way.

Comparisons with the 1993 novelisation[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • While both versions give Kemel a backstory, the two are entirely different. In the original novelisation, he met Maxtible while working for a blacksmith in Turkey, not as a wrestler in London.
  • The notable Red Dalek is never identified in this version. Technically, there is no explicit confirmation that a Red Dalek is not present. However, in one of the scenes it originally featured in, it is replaced by a Dalek which is said to look similar to all the rest and is also not the leader of the operation.
  • Both versions feature Black Daleks, which were not in the televised version. Whereas the original novelisation replaced all the Emperor's black-domed guards with Black Daleks, the 2023 novelisation features a singular prominent Black Dalek as well as black-domed Daleks.
  • Ironically, the Black Dalek Leader, although directly mentioned, is explicitly not present in the original novelisation, even though author John Peel effectively codified the character's literary portrayal in his other Target novelisations (by his authorial intent, the Black Dalek is said to have died in The Mutation of Time [+]Loading...["The Mutation of Time (novelisation)"]). The individual Black Dalek in the 2023 version is so similar in its portrayal to the Black Dalek Leader that it could be interpreted as the same character, save for its alternate fate.
  • Both novelisations give the Emperor's backstory as being one of the earliest Daleks. The 2023 novelisation does not give mentions of Davros, the Dalek Prime or any of the experiments it conducted on itself, nor many of the other heavier continuity points as the 1993 novelisation does, but both versions of the backstory are nevertheless compatible.
  • The 1993 novelisation notably set the background of the story as taking place during the Great War, sparked by the events of The Daleks' Master Plan [+]Loading...["The Daleks' Master Plan (TV story)"]. Although no such details are included in the 2023 novelisation which is more self-contained, reference is made to an ongoing Dalek "war effort". Daleks vs Daleks! [+]Loading...["Daleks vs Daleks! (short story)"] also supports both in their being an ongoing conflict at the time of the story's events.

Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Each chapter corresponds to one episode of the televised serial. The chapter titles for all bar "Chapter Six: Escape to Danger" are the original working titles for the televised episodes,[1] even though individual episode titles were by this time no longer being used; Season 3's four-part story The Gunfighters [+]Loading...["The Gunfighters (TV story)"] being the last to feature them. No working title is given on existing BBC paperwork for The Evil of the Daleks episode six. The original novelisation also featured these titles (except "Escape to Danger") among its 33 chapters.
  • Each chapter concludes with the Doctor taking a short break from retelling the story on the mind projector, allowing him, Jamie and Zoe to comment on the events. This framing device results in the novel becoming a fully-detailed account of what takes place chronologically between The Wheel in Space [+]Loading...["The Wheel in Space (TV story)"] and Fear of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Fear of the Daleks (audio story)"].
  • The interludes with Zoe and the mind projector are written in the first person from Jamie's perspective. The main bulk of the story, retelling The Evil of the Daleks, is written in the third person.
  • A poster for this novelisation and Rose [+]Loading...["Rose (novelisation)"] was included in SFX 373.
  • Coincidentally, both narratives are chronologically followed by Big Finish Productions releases in The Companion Chronicles which feature the Daleks: The Death of the Daleks [+]Loading...["The Death of the Daleks (audio story)","The Death of the Daleks"] immediately follows The Evil of the Daleks, and Fear of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Fear of the Daleks (audio story)"] immediately follows The Wheel in Space.

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Doctor begins questioning the morality of his actions as he realises the implications of what he is doing to the Daleks. On their next landing after departing Skaro, he is struggling to come to terms with this. (AUDIO: The Death of the Daleks [+]Loading...["The Death of the Daleks (audio story)"]). The Fourth Doctor later experienced the same moral quandry when given the chance to wipe out the Daleks from birth. (TV: Genesis of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Genesis of the Daleks (TV story)"])
  • The Daleks are engaged in an ongoing war effort. (PROSE: Daleks vs Daleks! [+]Loading...["Daleks vs Daleks! (short story)"])
  • Some humanised Daleks attempt to give each other names, with the Doctor considering that they could start their own civilisation if they survived. Led by Alpha, they survivors would go on to attempt this. (COMIC: Children of the Revolution [+]Loading...["Children of the Revolution (comic story)"]).
  • After finishing the story, the Doctor explains to Jamie that he was giving himself a mental workout to make sure there was no lasting damage caused by the rocket and his recent bump to the head. (The Wheel in Space [+]Loading...["The Wheel in Space (TV story)"])
  • Jamie believes the Doctor chose to show Zoe their first meeting with Victoria because the two miss her after her recent departure. (TV: Fury from the Deep [+]Loading...["Fury from the Deep (TV story)"])
  • Due to the Time Lords erasing her memories, Zoe recalled her reaction to being shown the story differently once her memories began to resurface. She remembered being terrified of the Daleks, to the point where the Doctor apologised for showing her the projection, and she rationalised this as recurring nightmares. (AUDIO: Fear of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Fear of the Daleks (audio story)"])

Audiobook[[edit] | [edit source]]

References[[edit] | [edit source]]

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]