Been many years since I've troubled myself with a novelisation of a classic Doctor Who story (as a child of the 70s the Target novels were one of the things which made me fall in love with reading), but hey, a free gift isn't to be sneezed at.
A story which closed the fourth (and Patrick Troughton's first) season of the show, and one which was supposed to be the final end of his mortal enemies, Evil of the Daleks is a fun story which displays the pepperpots from Skaro in all their mischievous glory. Sadly only one of the original seven episodes remain in the BBC archives but several attempts have been made to bring it back to life. The audio still exists so we've had that released with linking narration (twice!), fan reconstructions with surviving photos, an animated version, a novelisation by John Peel and now this, written (at least in part) by Frazer Hines, who played The Doctor's companion from 1966-69.
Distilling two and a half hours of television into 218 pages, it's a fast-paced affair, capturing all the main beats of the story and written well enough. As with the tv version, it does drag a bit in the middle, but overall, it's rollicking good fun. The daleks have hatched a plan to discover the human factor, what it is that separates mankind from daleks, so they can discover why they keep losing to them. Individuality, curiosity, empathy, the desire to question...all things anathema to those mutants cased within a war machine. The Doctor works against them, there's double crossing, subterfuge, adventure, betrayal and hi-jinks. Everything you'd want from classic Who. The book does a fine, if perfunctory job at retelling the story, and is a nice addition to the range. Let's hope that one day the episodes themselves might be found, but in the meantime this helps keeps them alive.