The Gunfighters (novelisation)

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The Gunfighters was a novelisation of the 1966 television serial The Gunfighters.

Publisher's summary

Back in the gun-totin', hard-hittin', fast-shootin' days of the Old Wild West, when outlaws ruled the land and the good guys stayed off the streets, a troupe of travelling players - Miss Dodo Dupont, Steven Regret and the mysterious Doctor Caligari - moseyed into the town of Tombstone one October afternoon.

Their method of transportation was a mite peculiar though. After all, a police box materialising out of thin air sure ain't the usual way to enter a sedate town like Tombstone.

And when the Doctor and his pardners meet up with Wyatt Earp and the notorious Clanton brothers, they soon find out that the scene is all set for high noon at the O.K. Corral.

Deviations from televised story

  • Part of the novel is told in first person, from the perspective of a journalist hearing an account of the story from Doc Holliday some years afterwards on his deathbed. The book includes a prologue and epilogue not connected to the televised story.
  • Cotton's novelisation makes use of coarse language and innuendo not present in the original serial (and rare for a Target novelisation). For example, when the Doctor arrives at Doc Holliday's office, he accidentally walks in on Holliday in bed with his receptionist (p. 44).
  • The novel deviates wildly from the televised story. Among the many differences: the Doctor does not recognise Johnny Ringo and he is initially recruited to take part in the gunfight. Therein the Doctor is depicted learning how to shoot a shotgun. At the outset of the gunfight he accidentally shoots two onlookers to death!
  • The character Kate Fisher is renamed Kate Elder in the novel.

Writing and publishing notes

  • Dedication: For TAMSIN, with coloured moon clouds
  • The back cover includes colour details of Fantastic Doctor Who Poster Offer!
  • The book switches between third and first person narration; supposedly told from Doc Holliday's point of view, the gunfighter is nonetheless referred to in third person, except on page 73 when it suddenly switches to first person.
  • The original Target Books edition features the artwork of Andrew Skilleter.

Additional cover images

To be added

British publication history

First publication:

  • Hardback
W.H.Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
  • Paperback
Target

External links