The Mind Robber (reference book): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
m (Reverted edits by Onionman69420 (talk) to last revision by OncomingStorm12th)
Tag: Rollback
Line 1: Line 1:
DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
{{title dab away}}
{{non-fiction}}
{{Infobox Reference Book
|image        = The Mind Robber (reference book).jpg
|cover        =
|writer      = [[Andrew Hickey]]
|publisher    = Obverse Books
|release date = [[1 September (releases)|1 September]] [[2016 (releases)|2016]]
|format      =
|isbn        = ISBN 978-1909031449
|series      = ''[[The Black Archive]]''
|prev        = Ghost Light (reference book)
|next        = Black Orchid (reference book)
}}
'''''The Mind Robber''''' was a reference book published by [[Obverse Books]] in [[2016 (releases)|2016]]. The book covered the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' serial ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]''.


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
== Publisher's summary ==
'We obey our creator. That is all that can be expected of any character, unless the Master bids us otherwise.'


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
[[Season 6]] of [[Doctor Who]] was a time of transition and experimentation, with a production team wanting to move from one formula – the base under siege that had defined the previous two seasons – and toward another – the more grounded stories of [[season 7]].


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
No story in the season was more experimental, though, than its second, ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]''. The debut of arguably the series' most visually inventive director, [[David Maloney]], the story was beset with production problems, including the last-minute addition of an extra episode and the sickness of a principal cast member; yet the creative solutions to these problems lifted the final story from a run- of-the-mill piece of whimsy into one of the series' finest moments.


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
[[Andrew Hickey]] has written books on topics including superhero comics, 1960s pop music, Doctor Who, and the intersections between those subjects. His first novel, ''[[Head of State (novel)|Head of State]]'', was published by Obverse Books in [[2015 (releases)|2015]].


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
== Subject matter ==
* ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]''


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
== Notable features ==
''to be added''


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
== Notes ==
''to be added''


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
== External links ==
* {{Obverse|product/7-the-mind-robber/}}


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
{{The Black Archive}}
{{TitleSort}}


DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
DJIATCH SUCKS FAT COCK -----------------> FROM ONION BOIZ INC
<br />[[File:SteiferPenis.jpg|thumb|link=https://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/File:SteiferPenis.jpg]]
[[Category:The Black Archive]]
[[Category:The Black Archive]]
[[Category:2016 reference books]]
[[Category:2016 reference books]]

Revision as of 21:17, 27 February 2022

This is a work of non-fiction.

Unlike other fictional universes, the Doctor Who universe is created solely by fiction. To us, this is not a valid source. Information from this source can only be used in "behind the scenes" sections, or on pages about real world topics.

The Mind Robber was a reference book published by Obverse Books in 2016. The book covered the Doctor Who serial The Mind Robber.

Publisher's summary

'We obey our creator. That is all that can be expected of any character, unless the Master bids us otherwise.'

Season 6 of Doctor Who was a time of transition and experimentation, with a production team wanting to move from one formula – the base under siege that had defined the previous two seasons – and toward another – the more grounded stories of season 7.

No story in the season was more experimental, though, than its second, The Mind Robber. The debut of arguably the series' most visually inventive director, David Maloney, the story was beset with production problems, including the last-minute addition of an extra episode and the sickness of a principal cast member; yet the creative solutions to these problems lifted the final story from a run- of-the-mill piece of whimsy into one of the series' finest moments.

Andrew Hickey has written books on topics including superhero comics, 1960s pop music, Doctor Who, and the intersections between those subjects. His first novel, Head of State, was published by Obverse Books in 2015.

Subject matter

Notable features

to be added

Notes

to be added

External links