Doctor Who and the Visitation (novelisation): Difference between revisions
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== Cover Design Note == | == Cover Design Note == | ||
The cover was initially intended to show a painting commissioned | The cover was initially intended to show a painting commissioned from [[David McAllister]]. [[Peter Davison]], however, was not pleased with McAllister's likeness of him, and a publicity photograph of Davison as [[the Doctor]] posing in front of the [[TARDIS]] was used instead. Most novelizations of the other [[Fifth Doctor]] [[List of television stories|television stories]] followed this same motif. | ||
[[Category:Target Novels]] | [[Category:Target Novels]] |
Revision as of 04:03, 25 January 2006
The Visitation | |
Doctor Who And The Visitation | |
File:The visitation novel.jpg | |
Series | Target Novelisation |
Number | |
Doctor | Fifth Doctor |
Companions | Adric |
Author | Eric Saward |
Publisher | W.H Allen & Co |
Publication Date | 1982 |
ISBN | ISBN 0-426-20135-3 |
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.
The Doctor and his companions receive a decidedly unfriendly welcome - but it soon becomes clear that the sinister activites of other visitors from time and space have made the villagers extremely suspicious 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...
- taken from the jacket synopsis
Book Chapters
There are no individually titled chapters for this book. It is simply broken up into eleven chapters, each numbered sequentially
Deviations from the Televised Story
To be added.
Cover Design Note
The cover was initially intended to show a painting commissioned from David McAllister. Peter Davison, however, was not pleased with McAllister's likeness of him, and a publicity photograph of Davison as the Doctor posing in front of the TARDIS was used instead. Most novelizations of the other Fifth Doctor television stories followed this same motif.