Dogworld: Difference between revisions
From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
(34 intermediate revisions by 12 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox | {{planet stub}} | ||
| | {{Infobox Location | ||
|aka = | |image = | ||
|type = [[Planet]] | |aka = | ||
|type = [[Planet]] | |||
|location = [[Mutter's Spiral]] | |location = [[Mutter's Spiral]] | ||
|natives= [[Poodle ( | |natives = [[Poodle (species)|Poodles]] | ||
| | |only = Mad Dogs and Englishmen (novel) | ||
}} | }} | ||
The '''dogworld''' was a [[planet]] inhabited by [[Poodle (species)|poodles]]. The dogworld had pink skies and green rocks. It was roughly sixty light years from [[Earth]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Mad Dogs and Englishmen (novel)|Mad Dogs and Englishmen]]'') | |||
The '' | == Behind the scenes == | ||
The back cover of ''[[Mad Dogs and Englishmen (novel)|Mad Dogs and Englishmen]]'' calls the dogworld "Dog World", but in the narrative of the novel the planet's name is not a proper noun, but instead more of a description — "the dogworld". However, ''[[A Gamble with Wildthyme (short story)|A Gamble with Wildthyme]]'' refers to the planet as "Dogworld". ''[[Enter Wildthyme (novel)|Enter Wildthyme]]'' stands halfway between these two stories by calling it "the Dogworld". | |||
[[Category:Planets]] | |||
[[Category: Mutter's Spiral Planets]] | [[Category:Mutter's Spiral planets]] | ||
[[Category:Planets visited by the Eighth Doctor]] | |||
[[Category:Planets visited by Iris Wildthyme]] |
Latest revision as of 18:47, 13 March 2023
The dogworld was a planet inhabited by poodles. The dogworld had pink skies and green rocks. It was roughly sixty light years from Earth. (PROSE: Mad Dogs and Englishmen)
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
The back cover of Mad Dogs and Englishmen calls the dogworld "Dog World", but in the narrative of the novel the planet's name is not a proper noun, but instead more of a description — "the dogworld". However, A Gamble with Wildthyme refers to the planet as "Dogworld". Enter Wildthyme stands halfway between these two stories by calling it "the Dogworld".