Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Doctor Who: The Vault by Marcus Hearn


Doctor Who: The Vault by Marcus Hearn (BBC Books £30), with a foreword by Steven Moffat, is full of pages depicting the “treasures” from the first fifty years of the good Doctor.

“Drawing on unseen and iconic material from the BBC archive and private collectors, The Vault is an unforgettable journey through 50 years of Doctor Who, via carefully selected photographs, props, costumes designs, production memos, letters, scripts and more.

This is the full and official story of Doctor Who, from the first pre-production memos in 1963 to the most recent props created for the 2013 series, including interviews with key contributors and scores of prop photos, design sketches and behind the scenes stills from every decade of the show's production. Taking you year by year through the world's longest running science fiction series, Marcus Hearn explores the show's groundbreaking innovations as well as its impact on popular culture through books and comics, magazines and toys, merchandise and ephemera.”

Glancing through the book brought back many memories of me, as a child, watching the early episodes – indeed, I remember watching episode one’s first ever broadcast. I don’t profess to be a Doctor Who geek and so I found this book fascinating, with a lot of material I wasn’t aware of. However, for the serious Who fan I suspect that there is little new – but nevertheless, whatever your knowledge on the subject, this volume would make a smashing Christmas gift.


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Doctor Who books


The Wheel of Ice by Stephen Baxter is set during Jamie and Zoe-era Doctor Who (BBC Books £7.99 – out on 1 August):

“The Wheel: A ring of ice and steel turning around a moon of Saturn, and home to a mining colony supplying a resource-hungry Earth. It’s a bad place to grow up.

The colony has been plagued by problems. Maybe it’s just gremlins, just bad luck. But the equipment failures and thefts of resources have been increasing, and there have been stories among the children of mysterious creatures glimpsed aboard the Wheel. Many of the younger workers refuse to go down the warren-like mines anymore. And then sixteen-year-old Phee Laws, surfing Saturn’s rings, saves an enigmatic blue box from destruction.

Aboard the Wheel, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe find a critical situation – and they are suspected by some as the source of the sabotage. They soon find themselves caught in a mystery that goes right back to the creation of the solar system. A mystery that could kill them all."

Meanwhile, Dark Horizons by Jenny T Colgan features the Matt Smith Doctor (BBC Books £7.99 – available this week):

"On a windswept northern shore, the islanders believe the worst they have to fear is a Viking attack. Then the burning comes. Water will not stop it. It consumes everything in its path - yet the burned still speak.The Doctor encounters a people under attack from a power they cannot possibly understand. They have no weapons, no strategy and no protection against a fire sent to engulf them all. The islanders must take on a ruthless alien force in a world without technology; but at least they have the Doctor on their side... Don't they?”


Saturday, September 15, 2012

Exodus Code by John & Carole Barrowman


John and Carole E Barrowman have collaborated on the Torchwood novel – Exodus Code (BBC Books £16.99).

“It starts with a series of unexplained events. Earth tremors across the globe. Women being driven insane by their heightened and scrambled senses. And the world is starting to notice –the number one Twitter trend is #realfemmefatales. Governments and scientists are bewildered and silent. The world needs Torchwood, but there's not much of Torchwood left.

Captain Jack Harkness has tracked the problem to its source: a village in Peru, where he's uncovered evidence of alien involvement. In Cardiff, Gwen Cooper has discovered something alien and somehow connected to Jack. If the world is to be restored, she has to warn him – but she's quickly becoming a victim of the madness, too...”

The Dalek Project by Justin Richards & Mike Collins


Doctor Who – The Dalek Project is a graphic novel by Justin Richards and Mike Collins, published by BBC Books (£14.99).  In this story, the Doctor is portrayed by Matt Smith.

“It’s 1917. It’s the height of the Great War and Hellcombe Hall is a house full of mystery: locked doors, forbidden rooms, dustsheets covering guilty secrets, and ghostly noises frightening the servants. Most mysterious of all, the drawing room seems to open directly onto a muddy, corpse-filled trench on the Western Front…

Arriving at this stately home, the Doctor meets Lord Hellcombe, an armaments manufacturer who has a new secret weapon he believes will win the war: he calls it ‘the Dalek’. Soon, the Doctor and his new friends are in a race against time to prevent the entire Western Front from becoming part of the Dalek Project!”

Thursday, August 16, 2012

The Wheel of Ice by Stephen Baxter


“She had no name. She had only her mission - she would return Home. And bathe in the light of a long-dead sun... Even if it meant the sacrifice of this pointless little moon to do it.

The Wheel of Ice: a ring of ice and steel turning around a moon of Saturn, home to a colony mining minerals for a resource-hungry future Earth. A bad place to grow up. The Wheel has been plagued by problems. Maybe it's just gremlins, just bad luck. But what's the truth of the children's stories of 'Blue Dolls' glimpsed aboard the gigantic facility? And why won't the children go down the warren-like mines? And then sixteen-year-old Phee Laws, surfing Saturn's rings, saves an enigmatic blue box from destruction.

Aboard the Wheel, The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe find a critical situation - and three strangers who have just turned up out of nowhere look like prime candidates to be accused of sabotage ... The Doctor finds himself caught up in a mystery that goes right back to the creation of the solar system. But it's a mystery that could have dire repercussions for the people on the Wheel. It's a mystery that could kill them all.”

Discover more in Doctor Who: The Wheel of Ice by Stephen Baxter (BBC Books £16.99), now available.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

New Doctor Who book by Stephen Baxter


BBC Books has announced the forthcoming publication of Doctor Who: The Wheel of Ice by Stephen Baxter, an all-new Doctor Who adventure starring The Second Doctor, as played by Patrick Troughton, with his companions Jamie and Zoe. The Wheel of Ice is due in August 2012 as a £16.99 hardback. 

“She had no name. She had only her mission - she would return Home. And bathe in the light of a long-dead sun... Even if it meant the sacrifice of this pointless little moon to do it.”

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Dark Horizons by J T Colgan


"You may or may not have noticed, but we appear to be on fire...

On a windswept Northern shore, at the very tip of what will one day become Scotland, the islanders believe the worst they have to fear is a Viking attack. Then the burning comes. They cannot run from it. Water will not stop it. It consumes everything in its path - yet the burned still speak.

The Doctor is just looking for a game on the famous Lewis chess set. Instead he encounters a people under attack from a power they cannot possibly understand. They have no weapons, no strategy and no protection against a fire sent to engulf them all.”

Dark Horizons by J T Colgan (aka Jenny Colgan) is the latest Doctor Who novel to be published next month by BBC Books (12.99). In this story, the doctor is “played” by Matt Smith. 

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Doctor Who re-released


BBC Books has re-released a number of Doctor Who books in slim paperback editions (at £4.99 each), and all featuring brand new introductions:

The Tenth Planet by Gerry Davis – based on the TV programme first shown in October 1966, and the first time the Cybermen appeared; introduction by Tom MacRae

The Three Doctors by Terrance Dicks – based on the Doctor Who story first broadcast in December 1972/ January 1973; introduction by Alastair Reynolds

The Day of the Daleks by Terrance Dicks – based on the story first broadcast in January 1972; introduction by Gary Russell

The Loch Ness Monster by Terrance Dicks – based on the story originally shown in August to September 1975, and features Sarah Jane Smith, Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart and UNIT; introduction by Michael Moorcock

The Ice Warriors by Brian Hayles – based on the programme first shown in November/ December 1967; introduction by Mark Gatiss

The Ark in Space by Ian Marter – based on the story first broadcast in January/ February 1975; introduction by Steven Moffat

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Doctor Who: Shada

Released next week: Doctor Who: Shada (BBC Books £16.99) is Douglas Adams’ Lost Adventure, completed /novelised by Gareth Roberts.

“The Doctor’s old friend and fellow Time Lord Professor Chronotis has retired to Cambridge University – where nobody will notice if he lives for centuries. But now he needs help from the Doctor, Romana and K-9. When he left Gallifrey he took with him a few little souvenirs – most of them harmless. But one of them is extremely dangerous.”

This novel is based on the scripts by Adams, but never made it to the screen. It features the fourth Doctor – played by Tom Baker.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Wiped! Doctor Who's Missing Episodes by Richard Molesworth

From the Telos Press:

In the 1960s, the BBC screened 253 episodes of its cult science fiction show Doctor Who, starring William Hartnell and then Patrick Troughton as the time travelling Doctor. Yet by 1975, the Corporation had wiped the master tapes of every single one of these episodes. Of the 124 Doctor Who episodes starring Jon Pertwee shown between 1970 and 1974, the BBC destroyed over half of the original transmission tapes within two years of their original broadcast. In the years that followed, the BBC, along with dedicated fans of the series, began the arduous task of trying to track down copies of as many missing Doctor Who episodes as possible. The search covered BBC sales vaults, foreign television stations, overseas archives, and numerous networks of private film collectors, until the tally of missing programmes was reduced to just 108 episodes.

This book looks in detail at how the episodes came to be missing in the first place, and examines how material subsequently came to be returned to the BBC. Along the way, those people involved in the recovery of lost slices of Doctor Who's past tell their stories in candid detail, many for the very first time. No more rumours, no more misinformation, no more fan gossip. The truth about Doctor Who's missing episodes can now be told in full!

Wiped! Doctor Who's Missing Episodes by Richard Molesworth covers a somewhat contentious aspect of the BBC's history, that of their wholescale throwing away of archive television recordings from the sixties, in a period leading to around 1977/8 when it was largely stopped by the intervention of concerned individuals. Richard Molesworth has painstakingly peeled back the layers behind these actions, finding out exactly what was destroyed and when, and then chronicling the attempts of fans to locate and replace the BBC's lost archive of Doctor Who material - with a large degree of success.

'I've always been fascinated by the subject of missing episodes: how they came to be missing in the first place, and how they got to be found,' explains Richard. 'I remember reading about the 'first' publically announced recovered episode in Doctor Who Magazine - Part Two of 'The Abominable Snowmen' - and not being able to get my head around the concept of episodes of a BBC programme being in a private collectors hands. So I wanted to know more. As I got to know more people in the BBC, and talk to people who had returned episodes, I realised that the stories behind the finds were fascinating.

'I think fans - especially modern ones - just can not understand why the BBC don't have every single one of the Doctor's adventures sitting on the shelves of their archive. Older fans, who were watching at the time of the original series in the late 70s or 80s, wanted to see the earlier Doctors probably more than they wanted to watch the new Doctor Who programmes that the BBC were making. The older stories has such a mythos and mystique about them, and many of them had been novelised by Target books, which made you want to watvh them even more, especially when photos from these stories began appearing in books and magazines much more at this point. Those realy, really older fans, who watched the series in the 60s, wanted to watch the stories they remembered with so much affection again. And of course, everyone loves a grail quest, and to Doctor Who fans, that's what the missing episodes are. If they had all been destroyed, and not a single episode had been found in the last 30 years, then I think fans would accept they're gone, and move on. But the fact that lost episodes did pop up from time to time (although finds have dried up in the last decade-or-so) gives them hope. And like all good grail stories, more myths, rumours and misinformation have cropped up around the subject of missing episodes than any other single aspect of the series. Practically every other aspect of the series has been studied and documented in meticulous detail over the years, but missing episode rumours persisted.'

Richard has been researching the book for a good thirty years, so he had a wealth of information to draw on. 'I've written articles for magazine like DWB and Doctor Who Magazine on the subject a fair few times. But after deciding to actually write the book - which I had been wanting to do for some years - I suppose it took about a year to pull everything together, to interview the people I wanted to talk to, and to write the text. The research was difficult at times, but most of the people I contacted were actually more than happy to discuss things, and were glad that they were being asked to give their side of things for the first time.'

TV historian and researcher Richard Bignell commented about Wiped! : 'Richard's dedicated research into the story of why so many episodes of Doctor Who came to be missing from the BBC Archive and how many of those episodes came to be recovered, is a fascinating journey of discovery. With new information sourced from the original BBC documents of the time, Wiped! is a detailed account that helps to finally sort out the fact from the fiction and the truth from the hyperbole.'

Wiped! Doctor Who's Missing Episodes by Richard Molesworth is published September 2010 at £15.99. Visit the Telos website for ordering details.

Friday, March 27, 2009

2009 BBC National Short Story Award

The 2009 BBC National Short Story Award was launched on 26 March. This year's panel of judges are: singer-songwriter Will Young, broadcaster and journalist Tom Sutcliffe (chair), author Dame Margaret Drabble, Orange Prize winner Helen Dunmore and BBC Radio 4’s Editor Di Speirs. The shortlist will be announced on Friday 27 November with the five stories broadcast on BBC Radio 4 each weekday before the winner is announced. The five stories will also be published in a special collection. Entries are now open for the Award. The deadline for entries is 5pm on 15 June 2009

Go to the Beeb for details.

Monday, February 23, 2009

SF on the BBC

The BBC is to broadcast a number of SF/fantasy programmes on Radios 3, 4 and 7. The short season includes adaptations of works by H G Wells, J G Ballard and Arthur C Clarke. Full details can be found here.