The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation): Difference between revisions

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|publisher= Target Books
|publisher= Target Books
|publisher2= W.H. Allen
|publisher2= W.H. Allen
|cover= [[Graham Potts]]
|release date= [[20 November (releases)|20 November]] [[1986 (releases)|1986]]
|release date= [[20 November (releases)|20 November]] [[1986 (releases)|1986]]
|format= Hardcover and paperback editions; 10 Chapters, 144 Pages  
|format= Hardcover and paperback editions; 10 Chapters, 144 Pages  
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[[Category:Target novelisations]]
[[Category:Target novelisations]]
[[Category:1986 novels]]
[[Category:1986 novels]]

Revision as of 20:17, 2 June 2018

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The Celestial Toymaker was a novelisation based on the 1966 television serial The Celestial Toymaker.

Publisher's summary

1986 edition

Somewhere outside space and time there waits the Celestial Toymaker, an enigmatic being who ensnares unwary travellers in his domain to play out his dark and deadly games.

Separated from the security of the TARDIS, the First Doctor is forced to play the complex trilogic game with the evil magician. Meanwhile, Dodo and Steven must enter into a series of tests with, among others, the schoolboy Cyril and the King and Queen of Hearts.

If they lose, they are condemned to become the Toymaker's playthings for all eternity. For in the malevolent wonderland that is the Celestial Toyroom, nothing is just for fun...

Chapter titles

  1. Trapped
  2. Bring On The Clowns
  3. Snakes and Ladders
  4. The Hall of Dolls
  5. Siege Perilous
  6. The Last Deadly Sister
  7. Enter Mrs Wiggs and Sergeant Rugg
  8. The Ballroom
  9. The Final Test
  10. Stalemate

Deviations from televised story

  • The Doctor indicates on a number of occasions that the Toymaker is one of a race of toymakers.
  • The cliffhanger in The Gunfighters is omitted, with the novel ending on the Doctor's statement that they will encounter the Toymaker again.
  • Additional scenes compare the toys to nuclear weapons.

Writing and publishing notes

  • A foreword by Gerry Davis (Los Angeles, 1985) explains that “for this book version we were able to resurrect some extra material which had to be cut from the TV serial” which he also explains was written hurriedly in an emergency.
  • Writer Gerry Davis was very keen to get the commission for this, eagerly awaited novelisation, which he then gave to Alison Bingeman.
  • Bingeman's credit makes this the first novel in the history of the Target Books series to be written (or, in this case, co-written) by someone who had not either written scripts for Doctor Who or had been part of its production team. In the next few years several other novels by such "third parties" would be published by Nigel Robinson and John Peel.
  • The back cover includes colour details of Fantastic Doctor Who Poster Offers!
  • The cover for the original Target Books edition features the artwork of Graham Potts.

Additional cover images

British publication history

First publication:

  • Hardback
W.H.Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
  • Paperback
Target

Re-issues:

Paperback: Target / Virgin Publishing Ltd. UK December 1992 Cover by Alistair Pearson (£2.50 UK)

External links

to be added