Jenny Colgan: Difference between revisions

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{{update|Is there anywhere she's actually credited in the DWU as just Jenny Colgan? Both ''[[Time Reaver (audio story)|Time Reaver]]'' and ''[[In the Blood (novel)|In the Blood]]'' in 2016 also use the T.}}
{{update|Is there anywhere she's actually credited in the DWU as just Jenny Colgan? ''[[Time Reaver (audio story)|Time Reaver]]'', ''[[In the Blood (novel)|In the Blood]]'' and ''[[Gardens of the Dead (audio story)|Gardens of the Dead]]'', all from 2016, also use the T.}}
{{rename|[[Jenny T. Colgan]]}}
{{rename|[[Jenny T. Colgan]]}}
{{real world}}
{{real world}}

Revision as of 11:02, 16 May 2016

This article needs to be updated.

Is there anywhere she's actually credited in the DWU as just Jenny Colgan? Time Reaver, In the Blood and Gardens of the Dead, all from 2016, also use the T.

These omissions are so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Check out the discussion page and revision history for further clues about what needs to be updated in this article.

This topic might have a better name.

Jenny T. Colgan

Talk about it here.

RealWorld.png

Jenny Colgan wrote the Eleventh Doctor novel, Dark Horizons, under the pen-name J.T. Colgan and her short story, The Triple Knife, as well as her audio story The Boundless Sea, as Jenny T. Colgan. She otherwise wrote under her full name and was credited as Jenny Colgan for her later DWU works.[which?]

She once claimed that her entirely fictitious middle initial stood for "Tardis".[1]

As of 2013, a reasonable amount of her work contained Scottish themes or locales, and Dark Horizons was no exception. Her novel-writing career started in earnest at the dawn of the 21st century, when she began releasing, on average, a little over a book a year.

Though typically a writer of romantic comedies for young adults, she was thrilled to be asked to write a Doctor Who novel, as she was a lifelong fan. Her association with Doctor Who began as a child watching Tom Baker and voraciously reading Target novelisations, but her fandom waned during the Colin Baker and Sylvester McCoy tenures — only to be rekindled by the Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat eras.[1]

She also contributed to the charity reference book Behind the Sofa: Celebrity Memories of Doctor Who.

Bibliography

Short stories

Time Trips

The Scientific Secrets of Doctor Who

The Legends of River Song

The Legends of Ashildr

Novels

Audio stories

The Diary of River Song

Short Trips

Footnotes

External links