I can hardly believe the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who is tomorrow! I remember the 20th anniversary so well, watching 'The Five Doctors', the anniversary special whose greatest achievement was that it managed to make sense as a story despite bringing back an improbable number of characters from twenty years of TV. I think Australia's ABC showed it extraordinarily soon after its premiere, probably within a couple of days.
If my 1983 self could only see what I see now, how bizarre it would all seem: the 50th anniversary special, broadcast simultaneously in dozens of countries, and showing in cinemas. In 3D! The 20th anniversary was a big deal to us fans at the time, but I don't think it made much of an impression on the wider world. The 30th was marked by a pretty good documentary. The 40th barely at all. Amazingly, at the 50th, the world seems to have become as obsessed with the show as I've always been. The Google home page has a Doctor Who game on it. There seems to be 100 times more press coverage for Doctor Who's 50th than for the Kennedy assassination's, which overshadowed Doctor Who's first episode by happening hours before its broadcast. It's like the inside of my head has leaked into the world. Again. Weird.
Actually, if my 1983 self could see what I see, he'd probably be slightly more freaked out by the way that movie he saw in August, 'WarGames', turned out to be the most important cultural event of the year, as most people's first peek at our freaky 21st century lives.
Anyway, all this year Puffin Books, in association with the BBC, have been publishing Doctor Who 'e-shorts', short children's books, one per month, one per Doctor. This is the first one I've felt inspired to buy, because it's by Neil Gaiman. It was a pretty quick read, and probably equates to about 20 or 30 pages of a normal paperback.
It features the 11th Doctor (or is he?) and Amy, and is set in the show's 2010 series, some time between The Eleventh Hour and The Sexy Fish Vampires of Venice. The monsters are furries. Nasty alien furries. It has a pretty original invasion plot, and funny bits. I liked the living room.
Clever children with good taste should enjoy it. Also older fans who only pretend to be grown ups because we're cursed to look like them. To be honest, my 1983 self would probably be MOST freaked out to discover he'll regenerate into a fat bald man with a goatee.
The fan will detect a few interesting foreshadowings: the Doctor asks Amy about her parents and gets an evasive answer - in the TV show it was hinted that this must have happened, and here it is. There's also an incidental foreshadowing of a much later development, as revealed in May in 'The Name of the Doctor', and developed further in the recent minisode 'The Night of the Doctor'.