A Christmas Carol: Difference between revisions

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:''For the [[2010]] Christmas special, see [[A Christmas Carol (TV story)]].''
{{you may|A Christmas Carol (TV story)|n1=the television story}}
 
'''''A Christmas Carol''''' was a novelette written by [[Charles Dickens]] and published in [[1843]].  
'''''A Christmas Carol''''' was a novelette written by [[Charles Dickens]] and published in [[1843]].  


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[[Category:Written by Charles Dickens]]
[[Category:Written by Charles Dickens]]
[[Category:Books from the real world|Christmas Carol]]
[[Category:Books from the real world|Christmas Carol]]

Revision as of 22:40, 7 June 2013

You may be looking for the television story.

A Christmas Carol was a novelette written by Charles Dickens and published in 1843.

In 1869, Dickens gave a reading from this story in Cardiff. It was interrupted by the Gelth-possessed corpse of Mrs Peace who, in life, had been a fan of the story. (TV: The Unquiet Dead)

The Eleventh Doctor used the story as a basis for a plan to convince Kazran Sardick to save a crashing starliner. (TV: A Christmas Carol)

In a world where all of history occurred at once because River Song refused to kill the Doctor, Charles Dickens gave some details about his "new Christmas special" on TV, at 5:02pm 22 April 2011, as that was always the time and date in that timeline. He said that it would involve ghosts and the past, the present and future, all at the same time. (TV: The Wedding of River Song)

Behind the scenes

Trivia

  • One idea for the first two stories of Doctor Who was a take on a Christmas Carol, with the ghost of Jacob Marley really being the Doctor, only slightly tipsy. [1]

Connections

A Christmas Carol