Doctor Who and the Visitation (novelisation): Difference between revisions
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|setting= [[London]], [[Earth]], late [[August]] to [[2 September]] [[1666]] | |setting= [[London]], [[Earth]], late [[August]] to [[2 September]] [[1666]] | ||
|writer= [[Eric Saward]] | |writer= [[Eric Saward]] | ||
|publisher= Target Books | |publisher= Target Books | ||
|publisher2= W.H. Allen | |||
|novelisation of= The Visitation | |novelisation of= The Visitation | ||
|release date= [[19 August (releases)|19 August]] [[1982 (releases)|1982]] | |release date= [[19 August (releases)|19 August]] [[1982 (releases)|1982]] |
Revision as of 00:13, 14 January 2014
Doctor Who and the Visitation was a novelisation based on the 1982 television serial The Visitation. This was the first Fifth Doctor novelisation to be published.
Publisher's summary
1982 edition
Tegan, the young air hostess who quite unintentionally became a member of the TARDIS’s crew, wants to return to her own time, but when the Doctor tries to take her back to Heathrow Airport in the twentieth century the TARDIS lands instead on the outskirts of seventeenth-century London.
1992 edition
"Call yourself a Time Lord?" Tegan shouted. "A broken clock keeps better time than you!" The Doctor tries to return Tegan to the Heathrow she left in 1981, but instead the TARDIS lands just outside London in 1666 - the year of the Great Plague. The Doctor and his companions receive a decidedly cool welcome - and it soon becomes clear that the sinister activities of other visitors from space and time have made the villagers extremely sensitive of outsiders. And as a result of the aliens' evil schemes, the Doctor finds himself on the point of playing a key role in a gruesome historical event. This is a novelization by Eric Saward of his own television story, first broadcast in 1982.
Deviations from televised story
- To be added
Writing and publishing notes
- The first book in the range to feature the use of a photographic cover.
- There are two rumours around the reason for this; Firstly that Peter Davison’s agent rejected the proposed artwork by (David McAllister) on the grounds of it showing a poor likeness to his client, and secondly, that in an attempt to tie the range of novelisations more closely with a new season and a new Doctor on television, photographs were a way of revamping the range. The latter seems more likely, as a deliberate change of policy, bearing in mind that the decision to use photographs was extended to subsequent releases for a short time.
- This was the first title to be referred to in the Target library as book number 74. The number appeared on the cover on a subsequent reprint.
- Dedication: `For Paula, with fondest love’
- Cover Flash reads`A BBC TV PROGRAMME WITH PETER DAVISON AS THE DOCTOR’
Additional cover images
1992 edition; Cover by Alister Pearson
British publication history
To be added
First Publication:
- Hardback
- W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
- Paperback
- Target
Re-issues:
Editions published outside Britain
To be added
External links
Warning: Display title "<i>Doctor Who and the Visitation</i>" overrides earlier display title "<i>Doctor Who and the Visitation </i> (novelisation)".