Doctor Who and the Face of Evil (novelisation)
Doctor Who and the Face of Evil was a novelisation based on the 1977 television serial The Face of Evil.
Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]
1978 Target Books edition[[edit] | [edit source]]
Setting the controls for Earth, the Doctor is surprised when the Tardis lands in a primeval forest. Has the Tracer gone wrong or has some impulse deep in the unconscious mind directed him to this alien planet? In investigating the forest, the Doctor meets and assists Leela, a warrior banished from her tribe, the Sevateem. Through Leela, it gradually becomes apparent that the constant war between the Sevateem and the Tesh has been instigated by the god they both worship, Xoanon.
Xoanon, an all-powerful computer, is possessed by a desperate madness – a madness that is directly related to Doctor Who, that causes Xoanon to assume the voice and form of the Doctor, a madness that is partly caused by the Doctor and that only the Doctor himself can rectify!
The Doctor must not only do battle with Xoanon, but also must escape from the savage practices of the Sevateem, and the technically mind-controlling destructive impulses of the Tesh.
1993 Target Books edition[[edit] | [edit source]]
'WHEN XOANON GETS DESPERATE ENOUGH, HE'S GOING TO DESTROY EVERYTHING...'
Thinking the controls are set for earth, the Doctor is surprised when the TARDIS lands in a huge primeval forest where chaos reigns - chaos for which the Doctor is partially responsible. This is the home of the Sevateem and Tesh tribes, who are constantly engaged in savage wars to appease their god Xoanon.
Through meeting Leela, the young female warrior banished by her tribe, the Doctor discovers that the constant raging battles between them are instigated by none other than Xoanon, in reality an all-powerful giant computer. With Leela as his companion, the Doctor must not only battle with Xoanon, but reconcile the differences with the two tribes - who are both intent on subjecting them to their savage law.
The Face of Evil was the creation of one of the TV Series' most memorable teams; Tom Baker as the Doctor and Louise Jameson as the warrior Leela.
Chapter titles[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Outcast
- The Invisible Terror
- Captured
- The Face of the Mountain
- Attack
- Danger for Leela
- The Test of the Horda
- Beyond the Wall
- The Tesh
- The Summons
- Xoanon
- The Trap
- The Last Battle
- Recovery
- Departure
Deviations from televised story[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The backstory of how and when the Fourth Doctor met Xoanon is discussed: the recently regenerated Doctor had travelled alone in the TARDIS from UNIT H.Q., performed his initial repairs on the Mordee spaceship computer, and then returned to Earth before anyone noticed he had been gone.
- The Doctor believes he was destined to return to the planet rather than return to join Sarah.
- The two assassins Neeva sends after Leela are said to be warrior priests.
- The character of Lugo is unnamed, and it is not said that the leader of the patrol that captures the Doctor and the guard killed by Leela in the inner sanctum are the same person.
- Leela tells the Doctor that the face on the mountainside was done by the Tesh; the Doctor speculates that it was done by laser.
- There are several minor dialogue changes, such as Calib wondering if the Sevateem are the Survey Team's "descendants" rather than "children".
- The sequence of events is changed at the end of part two, in order to end a chapter on the Doctor and Leela glimpsing a Tesh rather than Tomas being attacked by the invisible creatures.
- It is mentioned that the invisible creatures have destroyed the Sevateem village.
- There is a TARDIS interior scene inserted between the on-screen events of the Doctor following Leela into the TARDIS, telling her to come out, and the TARDIS dematerialising. Leela sees "a large important-looking lever" on the TARDIS control console and reaches out for it. The Doctor yells "Don't touch that. It'll send us off into the space-time continuum...", but Leela grabs the lever and pulls it, resulting in a central column starting to rise and fall. This is an example of Terrance Dicks’ decision not to reference or describe the wood-panelled secondary TARDIS control room used during Season 14’s adventures, as he felt the need to describe it – and, explain why the Doctor was using it – would be unnecessarily distracting. This means the only novelisation to mention the “other” control room is Doctor Who and the Masque of Mandragora by Philip Hinchcliffe, as all the other serials making up Season 14 were novelised by Terrance Dicks.
Writing and publishing notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- to be added
Additional cover images[[edit] | [edit source]]
1989 Star Books edition.
Front and Back Covers by Jeff Cummins and Andrew Skilleter1993 edition.
Cover by Alister Pearson
British publication history[[edit] | [edit source]]
First publication:
- Hardback
- W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
- Paperback
- Target
Re-issues:
Editions published outside Britain[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Published in the USA by Nelson Doubleday in 1986 as a combined Hardback edition, it comprised this story, Doctor Who and the Deadly Assassin and Doctor Who and the Robots of Death.
Audiobook[[edit] | [edit source]]
- An unabridged audiobook of the story was recorded by Louise Jameson for the RNIB in January 2011. It was only available to the registered blind.
Another audiobook was on 7 April 2022 complete and unabridged by BBC Audio and read by Louise Jameson.
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.