To celebrate 30 years of Doctor Who TV programme, and 20 years of the novelizations, this book takes a look back at the history of both through a collection of book cover art, reproduced as poster-sized prints. It is also illustrated with photographs, artwork and merchandize connected with the cult programme. After a short summary of each decade of the series, there is a four-page feature on each season. This includes two full-page reproductions, a photograph from each series of the season, and a short history of the Doctor's travels. Favourite scenes are illustrated with photographs and text extracts from the books, and Doctor Who exhibitions, plays and press coverage are also covered in text and illustrations.
This book does what it says on the tin, an illustrated guide to the original series. It explains how it all began back in 1963, contains cast and monster information and "magic moment" storyboards, a photo guide to cliffhangers on several stories. The book contains artwork, newspaper clippings and great photos from the adventures of the Doctor, and explains how the show continued in the literal world after it finished in 1989. A very impressive guide to the series, a must have for DW fans.
When my son was very young back in the 1990s, he and I would watch Doctor Who on the local public TV affiliate. This was our Saturday night ritual. It was kind of an escape for the two of us, to share a little sci-fi adventure and quality time. And he wasn't yet too jaded to sneer at the show's pedestrian special effects or hopelessly padded story lines. If he hadn't been along for the ride, I probably couldn't have enjoyed the show by myself. I found it barely watchable then, and unwatchable now. It was the sense of event and occasion that made it fun, as did the eccentric tics of the British actors who played the doctor.
The imagination and suspension of disbelief must kick in majorly when watching Who - and those are not bad skills to develop. As companions (no pun intended) to the show, I bought several guides or fan-type books that he and I could look at, and this particular one is a lovely large-format visually oriented show guide, mainly directed at show aficionados. It contains a pithily short overview of the history of the show, and is crammed with beautifully reproduced photos.
My son is now grown and working, so this book is just a nice memento on the shelves. I may get it out and thumb through it again sometime; a more likely prospect than sitting through an actual episode again.
A wonderful book with a great cross-section of cuttings, stills and - best of all - Target novelisation artwork. The story stops at it's publication date of 1993, this is still a fantastic visual scrapbook of the classic run of the series.
“Doctor Who - Timeframe: The Illustrated History” by David J. Howe
Interesting 'extras' of the public history of the sci-fi TV show. Lots of new and fascinating information and images.
What caught my attention was:
A young Julian Glover (today known as Maester Pycelle on Game of Thrones) as Richard the Lionheart, in 1965. (p8)
Jon Pertwee sang a 'Doctor Who' related music single. (p38)
I must look up 'Doctor Who - The Three Doctors” by Terrance Dicks (1975) {Porirua library has it} and 'The Green Death' by Malcolm Hulke (1975) and 'Doctor Who and the Horror of Fang Rock' by Terrance Dicks (1978).
“... Tom Baker has established himself well and truly as Dr. Who IV.” “With his 10ft. Scarf, floppy hippy hat and crumpled clothes, he's less dandified than Jon Pertwee, slightly more up-to-date than Patrick Troughton and a whole generation away from William Hartnell, the original marque. Said Tom: 'It's pointless to compare us.'” (newspaper article, 1975). (p50)
The text of this book is, quite frankly, irrelevant. Scavenge it instead for the gorgeous, full page paintings of "Doctor Who" book covers, from the 1970s to the 1990s -- they are ALL begging to be made into posters for your walls. This is the book for all the "Doctor Who" fans out there (myself included) who would pull out their Target novels, lay them out, and revel in the evocative cover images that transported you through time & space as easily as the prose inside each novel.
David J Howe has written several books about the history of Doctor Who. This book takes a photographic history of the programme from 1963-1989. Excellent presentation.