Kinda (novelisation): Difference between revisions
Shambala108 (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
|||
Line 47: | Line 47: | ||
* The relationship between Hindle and Sanders is explored in greater detail. | * The relationship between Hindle and Sanders is explored in greater detail. | ||
* The two unnamed members of the expedition who went missing before [[Roberts (Kinda)|Roberts]] are referred to as Stone and Carter. | * The two unnamed members of the expedition who went missing before [[Roberts (Kinda)|Roberts]] are referred to as Stone and Carter. | ||
*[[Hindle]]'s rank is given as lieutenant and the Doctor speculates that it is the era when Earth's empire is expanding. | |||
* The characters [[Anatta]], [[Anicca]] and [[Dukkha]] are unnamed. [[Aris]] is not identified as the Kinda seen outside the Dome. | |||
* Nyssa is described as slumping to the floor in the opening scene rather than just fainting. | |||
* The Kinda hostages do not show Hindle their fingernails before he asks them. | |||
* The Doctor speculates that the three missing team members encountered the Mara, refused to submit as Tegan did and were killed. | |||
* It is explained that Hindle turned the monitor off in order to avoid distraction, hence him missing Aris' attack. | |||
* The Doctor does not try to pass the stolen key card to [[Todd]]. | |||
== Writing and publishing notes == | == Writing and publishing notes == |
Revision as of 22:09, 27 September 2018
Kinda was a novelisation based on the 1982 television serial Kinda.
Publisher's summary
1984 edition
Nothing could disturb the serene peace of the planet Deva-Loka - or could it? An expeditionary force from Earth is dangerously out of control—and it's not only the peaceful race of the Kinda who are at risk...
A gentle stroll in the lush jungle leads the Doctor and Adric to an unexpected confrontation-and puts them at the mercy of a maniac...
But it is Tegan, lulled to sleep by mysterious wind-chimes, who comes the closest to the real danger that threatens not only her sanity but the existence of the whole planet...
Chapter titles
- Dangerous Paradise
- The Kinda
- Ghosts
- The Box of Jhana
- The Mara
- The Change
- The Vision
- The Dream Cave
- The Wheel Turns
- The Path of the Mara
- The Attack
- The Face of the Mara
Deviations from televised story
- The novel identifies Todd as "Doctor Todd".
- The relationship between Hindle and Sanders is explored in greater detail.
- The two unnamed members of the expedition who went missing before Roberts are referred to as Stone and Carter.
- Hindle's rank is given as lieutenant and the Doctor speculates that it is the era when Earth's empire is expanding.
- The characters Anatta, Anicca and Dukkha are unnamed. Aris is not identified as the Kinda seen outside the Dome.
- Nyssa is described as slumping to the floor in the opening scene rather than just fainting.
- The Kinda hostages do not show Hindle their fingernails before he asks them.
- The Doctor speculates that the three missing team members encountered the Mara, refused to submit as Tegan did and were killed.
- It is explained that Hindle turned the monitor off in order to avoid distraction, hence him missing Aris' attack.
- The Doctor does not try to pass the stolen key card to Todd.
Writing and publishing notes
- This was the final novelisation to use a fully photographic cover, and it was the final Target novelisation to feature the Doctor as part of the main art until The Savages was published several years later.
- Although number #84 in the Doctor Who library, the book was actually the 83rd to be released; this was because it was swapped in the publication order with the novelisation of Snakedance late in the day without the numbers being reassigned.
Additional cover images
1992 edition; cover by Alister Pearson
British publication history
First publication:
- Hardback
- W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
- Paperback
- Target
Audiobook
In August 1997, BBC Audio released an abridged audiobook version of the novel, read by Peter Davison.
It became part of the BBC MP3-CD Audio sampler Tales from the TARDIS Volume 1, "Ten hours on just one disc".