Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon (novelisation): Difference between revisions
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== Deviations from televised story == | == Deviations from televised story == | ||
* Both Jo Grant and the Master are given new introductions, with Grant in particular described as joining the Doctor for the first time, despite several earlier stories featuring her. As one of the first releases in the Target Books series, there was no expectation that ''all'' stories would eventually be adapted. Once the earlier stories had been novelised, no attempt was made at revising ''The Doomsday Weapon'', creating a continuity hiccough for those reading the novelisations in chronological order. | * Both Jo Grant and the Master are given new introductions, with Grant in particular described as joining the Doctor for the first time, despite several earlier stories featuring her. As one of the first releases in the Target Books series, there was no expectation that ''all'' stories would eventually be adapted. Once the earlier stories had been novelised, no attempt was made at revising ''The Doomsday Weapon'', creating a continuity hiccough for those reading the novelisations in chronological order. | ||
* The | * The various personal lives and backgrounds of Ashe's colonists and Interplanetary Mining Corporation personnel are greatly expanded in the novelisation. Dent, for instance, has a wife arranged by IMC's matchmaking computers and two children who are being educated in an IMC school. | ||
* | * The Earth that the colonists migrated from is elaborated upon in the novelisation. Metric units of measurement were adopted globally there some 6000 years ago and, in Dent's lifetime, it was fashionable to dye one's hair blue. On nonwork days, you could pay to journey up to experience sunshine on the concrete. Alternatively, you could invest in a Walk: a cubicle with a moving floor that took you through projected footage taken from the State Archives of historic greenery. Space travellers had well-developed legends surrounding the Daleks, Monoids, Drahvins and Earth's own mythology about the Silurians. | ||
* | * IMC's robot is a Class 3 Servo Robot, humanoid in shape, and nicknamed Charlie. Expecting it to crush his arm in response to a jibe, the machine instead repeats the Doctor's insult back to him on a recording with metallic laughter. | ||
* Fitting the unusual chronological rewrite, only the Doctor recognises the Master when he and Jo arrive at the tribunal being mediated between the colonists and IMC. Rather than being somewhat taken aback by the appearance of a fellow Time Lord as on television, the Master instead smiles and holds the Doctor at arm's length. Nonetheless, despite this being Jo's first story, the Doctor still possesses the key he recovered from ''[[Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons]]''. Here, it was found on a previous, unspecified adventure. | |||
* The Guardian is depicted as a doll-like creature that exists within the furnace of the atomic reactor used to power the Doomsday Weapon. Rather than the Doctor activating a self-destruct mechanism, it retreats and begins a meltdown of its own accord. | |||
* The ecological change in the planet's soil is more immediately drastic at the end of the novelisation. Here, grass and shrubbery begins to sprout from the tilled soil in seconds after a pleasant rainfall. The Doctor jokes that he and Jo should depart before the surrounding land turns into an impenetrable jungle. | |||
* The Keeper of the Time Lord files retells the story of [[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]''. | * The Keeper of the Time Lord files retells the story of [[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]''. | ||
* The Doctor organises a funeral for the Leesons. | * The Doctor organises a funeral for the Leesons. |
Revision as of 09:25, 29 December 2018
Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon was a novelisation based on the 1971 television serial Colony in Space.
Publisher's summary
1974 edition
The evil MASTER has stolen the Time Lords' file on the horrifying DOOMSDAY WEAPON with which, when he finds it, he can blast whole planets out of existence and make himself ruler of the Galaxy!
The Time Lords direct DOCTOR WHO and Jo Grant in TARDIS to a bleak planet in the year 2471 where they find colonists from Earth under threat from mysterious, savage, monster lizards with frightful claws! And hidden upon this planet is the DOOMSDAY WEAPON for which the MASTER is intently searching ...
Deviations from televised story
- Both Jo Grant and the Master are given new introductions, with Grant in particular described as joining the Doctor for the first time, despite several earlier stories featuring her. As one of the first releases in the Target Books series, there was no expectation that all stories would eventually be adapted. Once the earlier stories had been novelised, no attempt was made at revising The Doomsday Weapon, creating a continuity hiccough for those reading the novelisations in chronological order.
- The various personal lives and backgrounds of Ashe's colonists and Interplanetary Mining Corporation personnel are greatly expanded in the novelisation. Dent, for instance, has a wife arranged by IMC's matchmaking computers and two children who are being educated in an IMC school.
- The Earth that the colonists migrated from is elaborated upon in the novelisation. Metric units of measurement were adopted globally there some 6000 years ago and, in Dent's lifetime, it was fashionable to dye one's hair blue. On nonwork days, you could pay to journey up to experience sunshine on the concrete. Alternatively, you could invest in a Walk: a cubicle with a moving floor that took you through projected footage taken from the State Archives of historic greenery. Space travellers had well-developed legends surrounding the Daleks, Monoids, Drahvins and Earth's own mythology about the Silurians.
- IMC's robot is a Class 3 Servo Robot, humanoid in shape, and nicknamed Charlie. Expecting it to crush his arm in response to a jibe, the machine instead repeats the Doctor's insult back to him on a recording with metallic laughter.
- Fitting the unusual chronological rewrite, only the Doctor recognises the Master when he and Jo arrive at the tribunal being mediated between the colonists and IMC. Rather than being somewhat taken aback by the appearance of a fellow Time Lord as on television, the Master instead smiles and holds the Doctor at arm's length. Nonetheless, despite this being Jo's first story, the Doctor still possesses the key he recovered from Terror of the Autons. Here, it was found on a previous, unspecified adventure.
- The Guardian is depicted as a doll-like creature that exists within the furnace of the atomic reactor used to power the Doomsday Weapon. Rather than the Doctor activating a self-destruct mechanism, it retreats and begins a meltdown of its own accord.
- The ecological change in the planet's soil is more immediately drastic at the end of the novelisation. Here, grass and shrubbery begins to sprout from the tilled soil in seconds after a pleasant rainfall. The Doctor jokes that he and Jo should depart before the surrounding land turns into an impenetrable jungle.
- The Keeper of the Time Lord files retells the story of TV: The War Games.
- The Doctor organises a funeral for the Leesons.
- It is stated that the year is 2971, not 2471, in contradiction with the back cover blurb.
Writing and publishing notes
- The 1979 edition by Pinnacle Books in the US included an introduction by Harlan Ellison.
- The first edition Target cover was the first to feature the Master.
- This novelisation was later released as part of The Master Collection.
Chapter titles
- A Missing Secret
- Into Time and Space
- The Planet
- The Monster
- Starvation
- The Survivor
- The Robot
- The Men from IMC
- The Spy
- The Claw
- Face-to-face
- The Bomb
- The Attack
- The Adjudicator
- Primitive City
- The Ambush
- Captain Dent Thinks Twice
- The Master's TARDIS
- The Return of Captain Dent
- The Doomsday Weapon
- Mission Completed
Additional cover images
1979 edition; Cover by Jeff Cummins
British publication history
First publication:
- Hardback
- W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
- Paperback
- Target
Re-issues:
- 70p
- 1979 Target Books with a new cover by Jeff Cummins priced 75p (UK)
Editions published outside Britain
- Published in the USA in 1979 by Pinnacle Books.
- Published in Japan in 1980 by Hayakawa Bunko.
- Published in Portugal in 1983 by Editorial Presença.
Audiobook
This Target book was released complete and unabridged by BBC Audio and read by Geoffrey Beevers who played the Master (though not in Colony in Space).
The audio set of 4 CDs with an ISBN 1-4056-7795-3 was released in September 2007 priced £13.99 (UK)
The cover blurb and thumbnail illustrations were retained in the accompanying booklet with sleevenotes by David J. Howe. Music and sound effects by Simon Power.
External links
to be added