The Lost Boy (novelisation): Difference between revisions
No edit summary Tag: 2017 source edit |
No edit summary |
||
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
* [[K9 Mark IV|K9]] | * [[K9 Mark IV|K9]] | ||
* [[Cairn|Mr Cairn]] | * [[Cairn|Mr Cairn]] | ||
* [[ | * [[Robert Lines]] | ||
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 14:29, 17 April 2022
The Lost Boy was released in November 2008, a full year after the last release of novelisations. It adapts The Lost Boy, the final regular serial of The Sarah Jane Adventures first series. With its release, all episodes of the first season have been adapted. It is the first time a complete season of a Doctor Who-related series had been fully adapted in novelisation form within a year of original broadcast.
Publisher's summary
Life on Earth can be an adventure, too. You just need to know where to look.
Sarah Jane is shocked to see an appeal on television by distraught parents of a missing boy — Luke, her adopted son! She is accused of kidnapping him and has to hand Luke over to his "real" parents. But something doesn't seem right. With the help of her friends, Maria, Clyde and Alan, Sarah Jane uncovers a sinister alien plot and a shocking truth about a loyal "friend"...
Characters
- Sarah Jane Smith
- Luke Smith
- Maria Jackson
- Clyde Langer
- Mr Smith
- Alan Jackson
- Chrissie Jackson
- Slitheen family
- Mrs Galagher
- Mr Robinson
- Mrs Robinson
- Mrs Townsend
- George Bailey
- Nathan Goss
- Marco Goss
- June Goss
- K9
- Mr Cairn
- Robert Lines
References
- Luke remembers the quantum theory and Colluphid's Law of Hyper-Dimensional Mechanics, and he could spot flaws in Einstein's theory of relativity.
- The house that the Stafford family was supposed to live in was 26 Chalsey Grove.
- Brendan Richards is still working in Silicon Valley.
- In Ashley Stafford's room are were posters of footballers, In-Demand and UNIT 4.
- Nathan Goss was a fan of the Everton football club.
- Clyde Langer got Luke Smith into Kasabian, next he wanted to show him the music of the Arctic Monkeys.
- Peter Fairley, Patricia Conway, Ann Reynolds and Bryan Cawston are working for the Pharos Institute.
- Bloorm Vungah Bart Slitheen, Dax Fex Fize Slitheen and Korst Gogg Thek Lutiven-Day Slitheen stole the technology which made them able to use slim skin suits from the Blathereen family.
- The Slitheen want to sell Luke's telekinetic energy at the Energies Black Market on Antara IV.
- Ealing Broadway is Ealing's town centre.
- The Hambleton Estate is located at Grass Street at the Lake District. The Goss family lives at 64 Grass Street. They moved there from Guildford.
- Robert Lines is a member at the West Ealing Police.
- Luke's Slitheen "parents" live at 26 Chalsey Grove in Hammersmith.
- The residents of Hambleton Estate often go shopping in Carlisle.
- Old Forest Road leads into Bannerman Road.
- Luke has a T-shirt from the Natural History Museum.
Deviations from the televised story
- The novelisation features a specially written prologue. Written from Mrs Townsend's point of view, it describes how the Goss family got killed by the Slitheen and how their skin suits were used to create the fictional Heidi and Jay Stafford.
Continuity
to be added
|
|