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Terrance Dicks (1935–2019)

Author of Doctor Who and the Day of the Daleks

292+ Works 23,304 Members 282 Reviews 6 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Terrance Dicks

Doctor Who and the Day of the Daleks (1974) 587 copies, 5 reviews
Doctor Who and the Loch Ness Monster (1976) 505 copies, 6 reviews
Doctor Who and the Genesis of the Daleks (1976) 504 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion (1974) 444 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Revenge of the Cybermen (1976) — Adapter — 429 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: The Five Doctors (1983) 427 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who and an Unearthly Child (1981) 412 copies, 5 reviews
Doctor Who and the Talons of Weng-Chiang (1977) 411 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Three Doctors (1975) 409 copies, 7 reviews
Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowmen (1974) 401 copies, 13 reviews
Doctor Who and the Android Invasion (1978) — Adapter — 368 copies, 5 reviews
Doctor Who and the Dalek Invasion of Earth (1977) 363 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Giant Robot (1975) 362 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Web of Fear (1976) 314 copies, 6 reviews
Doctor Who and the Armageddon Factor (1980) 313 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Planet of the Spiders (1975) 309 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Deadly Assassin (1977) 299 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks (1976) 298 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Pyramids of Mars (1976) 298 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the State of Decay (1981) 296 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who: Death to the Daleks (1978) 296 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Carnival of Monsters (1977) 295 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Destiny of the Daleks (1979) 295 copies, 1 review
The Eight Doctors (1997) — Author — 292 copies, 7 reviews
Doctor Who: Kinda (1983) 292 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who and the Invasion of Time (1980) 291 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons (1975) 290 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who and the Time Warrior (1978) 287 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Brain of Morbius (1977) 287 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Keeper of Traken (1982) 283 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Face of Evil (1978) 283 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Horror of Fang Rock (1978) 281 copies, 6 reviews
Players (1999) 281 copies, 6 reviews
Doctor Who and the Stones of Blood (1980) 281 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: Arc of Infinity (1983) 279 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Claws of Axos (1977) 278 copies, 3 reviews
Made of Steel (2007) 273 copies, 10 reviews
Doctor Who: The Caves of Androzani (1985) 268 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Androids of Tara (1980) 265 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who: Warriors of the Deep (1984) 265 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Mutants (1977) 265 copies, 2 reviews
Timewyrm: Exodus (1991) 264 copies, 5 reviews
Doctor Who and the Hand of Fear (1979) 262 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: Snakedance (1984) 262 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: Four to Doomsday (1983) 261 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Underworld (1980) 259 copies, 5 reviews
Doctor Who and the Horns of Nimon (1980) 257 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Image of the Fendahl (1979) 255 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who and the Power of Kroll (1980) 253 copies, 2 reviews
Blood Harvest (1994) — Author — 251 copies, 6 reviews
Doctor Who and the Invisible Enemy (1979) 251 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: Inferno (1984) 247 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who and the Monster of Peladon (1980) 246 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who and the Planet of Evil (1977) 237 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Robots of Death (1979) 237 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who and the Nightmare of Eden (1980) 226 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: Meglos (1983) 226 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Mind of Evil (Doctor Who #96) (1985) 222 copies, 4 reviews
Shakedown (1995) — Author — 222 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who and the Sunmakers (1982) 220 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Krotons (1985) 216 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: The Time Monster (1985) 211 copies, 2 reviews
The Making of Doctor Who (1972) — Author — 193 copies, 4 reviews
Revenge of the Judoon (2008) 190 copies, 6 reviews
Doctor Who: The Ambassadors of Death (1987) 183 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Smugglers (1988) 176 copies, 1 review
Endgame (2000) — Author — 173 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: The Wheel in Space (1988) 171 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who: The Faceless Ones (1987) — Author — 171 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Seeds of Death (1986) 160 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: The Space Pirates (1990) 159 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: Planet of the Giants (1990) 158 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Mysterious Planet (1987) 156 copies, 1 review
Catastrophea (1998) — Author — 154 copies, 3 reviews
World Game (2005) 140 copies, 1 review
Deadly Reunion (2003) — Author — 128 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: Warmonger (2002) 119 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Target Storybook (2019) 89 copies, 2 reviews
Mean Streets (1997) — Author — 73 copies, 2 reviews
Teacher's Pet (1990) 66 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Scripts, Tom Baker 1974/5 (2001) — Author "Introduction" and "Robot" — 64 copies, 1 review
The Doctor Who Monster Book (1975) 62 copies
Doctor Who: Horror of Fang Rock [TV serial] (1977) — Writer — 52 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Brain of Morbius [TV serial] (2008) — Writer; Writer — 44 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: Robot [TV serial] (2007) — Writer — 37 copies
Invasion of the Bane (2007) 32 copies, 1 review
The Dæmons and The Time Monster (1989) — Author — 31 copies
Sarah Jane Smith: Comeback (2002) 30 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: Dalek Omnibus (1986) 27 copies
The Seeds of Doom and The Deadly Assassin (1989) — Author — 26 copies
Doctor Who Yearbook 1994 (1993) 25 copies
The Essential Terrance Dicks Volume 2 (2021) 24 copies, 1 review
The Second Doctor Who Monster Book (1977) 21 copies, 1 review
The Ultimate Adventure (2008) — Author — 20 copies, 1 review
The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book (1976) 17 copies, 2 reviews
Star Quest - Spacejack (1979) 15 copies
Seven Keys to Doomsday (2008) 15 copies, 1 review
Enter T.R. (1985) 14 copies, 1 review
T.R. Goes to School (1986) 13 copies
Star Quest (2004) 11 copies, 1 review
Star Quest - Roboworld (1979) 11 copies
Sally Ann on Her Own (1989) 10 copies
T.R.'s Day Out (1986) 10 copies
Case of the Blackmail Boys (1979) 10 copies
Cry Vampire! (1981) 10 copies
The Easter Island Incident (1999) 10 copies
The Wollagong Incident (1996) 8 copies
Terrorsaur! (1981) 8 copies
Sam,the Detective (1999) 7 copies
T.R.'s Hallowe'en (1986) 7 copies
Case of the Crooked: 2 (1981) 7 copies
Nurse Sally Ann (1994) 6 copies
Magnificent Max (1990) 5 copies
The Inca Alien Incident (2001) 5 copies
Knightschool (1992) 4 copies
La Fiesta de la escuela (1996) 4 copies
Nazi Dagger Incident (2001) 4 copies
Max and the Quiz Kids (1990) 4 copies
True Stories: Horror (1997) 4 copies
Ask Oliver (1988) 3 copies
Wereboy! (1982) 3 copies
Jonathan's Ghost Omnibus (1997) 3 copies
EL CASO DE LOS CHANTAJISTAS (1900) 3 copies, 1 review
Sagen om pengeafpresserne (1981) 2 copies
SCHOOL SPIRIT (1991) 2 copies
Scary Stories (1997) — Contributor — 2 copies
Esi-isän aaveen tapaus (1981) 2 copies
Kampf um die Erde (1981) 2 copies
Mindgame Saga 2 copies
Jonathan's Ghost (1991) 2 copies
Europe United (1991) 2 copies
L'attaque du cybervirus (1996) 2 copies
Lost Property (Bears) (1990) 1 copy
Goliath on holiday (1985) 1 copy
The picnic (1988) 1 copy
T.R. Afloat (1986) 1 copy
Goliath's Sports Day (1989) 1 copy
Vicky's victory (1985) 1 copy
War of the Witches (1983) 1 copy
Littlest on guard (1994) 1 copy
The great march West (1976) 1 copy
T.R.'s festival (1989) 1 copy
Jeu supreme (1998) 1 copy
Fallet med bankrånet (1983) 1 copy
Marvin's monster (1982) 1 copy

Associated Works

Doctor Who and the Cave Monsters (1974) — Introduction, some editions — 393 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who : A Celebration—Two Decades Through Time and Space (1983) — "Who and I" — 283 copies, 2 reviews
The Discontinuity Guide (1995) — Foreword, some editions — 245 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Five Doctors [1983 TV episode] (1983) — Screenwriter — 99 copies, 1 review
Short Trips: A Christmas Treasury (2004) — Contributor — 62 copies, 1 review
The Target Book: A History of the Target Doctor Who Books (2007) — Introduction — 54 copies, 3 reviews
Beyond the Stars (Tales of Adventure in Time and Space) (1983) — Contributor — 49 copies
Wiped! Doctor Who's Missing Episodes (2010) — Introduction — 44 copies, 1 review
Tales of the Shadowmen 1: The Modern Babylon (2005) — Contributor — 29 copies
Doctor Who: The Boxset (2008) — Contributor — 26 copies
A Life of Surprises (2005) — Contributor — 25 copies, 1 review
Who and Me: The Memoir of Barry Letts, Doctor Who Producer 1969-1974 (2008) — Foreword — 21 copies, 2 reviews
Talkback, Volume Two: The Seventies (2006) — Interviewee — 15 copies, 1 review
Talkback, Volume One: The Sixties (2006) — Interviewee — 14 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: Tales from the TARDIS, Volume One (2004) — Contributor — 11 copies
Doctor Who: The Krotons (BBC Audio Collection) (2008) — Script editor, some editions — 6 copies, 2 reviews
Bernice Summerfield: Treasury (2015) — Contributor — 5 copies
In●Vision: Season 18 Overview (1994) — Contributor "Borderlines" — 2 copies
In●Vision: The Five Doctors (1997) — Contributor "The Eight Doctors" and "Perfect Dicks-ion" — 2 copies
In●Vision: The Brain of Morbius (1989) — Contributor "Bland stand" — 2 copies
In●Vision: State of Decay (1994) — Contributor "Two script editors, one story" — 2 copies
In●Vision: Whose Doctor Who (1990) — Contributor "text, lies, and videotape" — 2 copies
In●Vision: Horror of Fang Rock (1990) — Contributor "The Script Mutations" — 2 copies
In●Vision: UNIT Special (1988) — Contributor "Soldiering On" — 2 copies
In●Vision: The Ark in Space (1988) — Contributor — 2 copies
In●Vision: Robot (1988) — Contributor — 2 copies
Roger Delgado ~ A Tribute (1987) — "You could almost say that the part of the Master was created for him" — 1 copy
Doctor Who: The Collection [2007] (2007) — Contributor — 1 copy
Doctor Who — An Adventure in Space & Time: The Krotons (1984) — Contributor "Holmes for Hire" — 1 copy

Tagged

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Reviews

328 reviews
The Doctor and Sarah are headed to the peaceful beach planet of Florana. Of course, in the Whoniverse, the TARDIS laughs in the face of vacation plans and sends the Doctor where he’s most needed. In this case, it’s the planet Exxilon, which is in the throes of a mysterious power drain that saps all technology of its power—including, sadly, the TARDIS. Also on Exxilon is a human expedition digging for parrinium, a valuable mineral that will cure a space plague. *Their* trouble will be show more to get the parrinium home to save their friends and family. And then *everyone’s* trouble shows up: THE DALEKS!

I read this after watching the TV episodes last month, and it is a very smooth read. Dalek stories are always reliable entertainment, and this one is no exception. I enjoyed the side comments in the narration (e.g., “Daleks have so little imagination that it is nearly impossible to hypnotise them”), and the Daleks themselves were hilarious when they were being thwarted by the power drain themselves. It certainly helps that I’d just seen the TV show, but I don’t think it’s essential to watch the show before reading the book. Recommended if you’re looking for a good Dalek story.
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This 1990 novelisation of a 1964 TV story is a load of light fun. After an accident in transit, the time travellers find themselves shrunk to insectile proportions and stranded in the garden of a pleasant country house (OF DEATH – I almost feel obliged to add).

Doctor Who is a bit of a cultural sponge, and here the influences are fabulously early 60s: The Incredible Shrinking Man, Dixon of Dock Green. The plot about a ruthless businessman and his deadly insecticide wouldn't seem out of show more place in early era Avengers.

There's a joy to that clash of ideas, even if the story doesn't really explore its more interesting character angles; none of the regulars are that bothered by their reduction in size (they share the audience's assurance they'll be back to normal before the next adventure) and surprisingly little is made of the brilliantly conceived irony that the Doctor has finally got Ian and Barbara back to present day Earth only at the wrong size!

Still, it's a very light book (I got through it in more or less one sitting) and delivers you a happy shot of early 60s adventure for that. Fun and fittingly small.
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Doctor Who and the Genesis of the Daleks (1976) / Doctor Who and the Pyramids of Mars (1976)
Back when I read my way through the first Doctor novelisations, I noted how the very idea of a "Doctor Who book" was emerging. Doctor Who in an exciting adventure with the Daleks (1964) was literally the only Doctor Who book in the universe when it came out; Doctor Who and the Zarbi (1965) was the second.

But by the time the first two books collected in The Essential Terrance Dicks, Volume Two were show more published, things were very different. Doctor Who and the Genesis of the Daleks and Doctor Who and the Pyramids of Mars were the fourth and fifth novelisations to feature the fourth Doctor—and the 23rd and 27th Target novelisations overall. By this time, there was no need of the novels to stand alone, to work for people who hadn't seen the television programme, or even the stories being novelised. The function of these books are very different to those earlier ones, part of a project to pump out the books to meet the demands of an enthusiastic child readership. And of course, no one was better at meeting that demand than former script editor Terrance Dicks.

When I read Dicks's Doctor Who and the Dalek Invasion of Earth (1977), I observed that the novel's unfortunate weak spot was the Daleks themselves:
I think probably the Daleks are a bit tricky to capture on the page, but I don't know that Dicks even really tries; [...] I don't think the book really sells you on their alien nature or their monstrousness. It seems to reckon (perhaps accurately) that you'll already know and care what a Dalek is because you've seen one on tv!
I felt the same way here, and I would extend that observation to Davros, the Daleks' creator. Maybe something about the Daleks doesn't capture Terrance Dicks's fancy (I haven't read any of his third Doctor Dalek novelisations yet), maybe he more broadly just can't vibe with a Terry Nation script, I don't know. But I felt like The Genesis of the Daleks had all of the to-ing and fro-ing of its tv counterpart, but little of the atmosphere or intensity. I know the inclusions in The Essential Terrance Dicks were determined by fan vote, but I kind of suspect fans were more voting on the quality of the original stories than that of the books in question per se. Of course, I can see how this book would be invaluable in 1976, when there was little chance you were going to see Genesis of the Daleks again, but while this book was of course an effortless glide to read, I found it had little to recommend the 2024 reader.

Pyramids of Mars, on the other hand, seemed to have lit up Terrance's imagination. This might be an unambitious novelisation of a story I've seen several times, but I found there were a lot of nice little touches here. While The Genesis of the Daleks seemed to go from dialogue sequence to dialogue sequence, faithfully recapitulating the script, The Pyramids of Mars has an original prologue about the Osirans, an original epilogue about Sarah Jane after her travels with the Doctor, and a number of long bits of dialogue-less prose that set the scene atmospherically or provide backstory. I suspect, based on all the original Dicks novels I've read, that the historical setting did more for him than the science fictional one of Genesis. This is pretty straightforward stuff (though Dicks carefully removes all references to "1980"), but it works on its own to a degree that Genesis did not. My current litmus test is to imagine my six-year-old reading these (I haven't actually tried to foist one on them yet, though), and I felt like I could imagine them getting a complete novelistic experience out of Pyramids that I don't think they would Genesis.

I think it also helps that this is the first of the books I've read in this sequence where Tom Baker comes through. Doctor Who and the Loch Ness Monster (1976) was too early for Dicks to have a sense of how Baker plays it, and Nation always writes a pretty generic Doctor, but here Dicks captures the moody, capricious nature of Tom Baker on the page pretty effectively. I look forward to seeing how this is handled in future novelisations.

Doctor Who and the Talons of Weng-Chiang (1977) / Doctor Who and the Horror of Fang Rock (1978)
People tend to lump Terrance Dicks novelisations into three periods, is my understanding: his early period, where the idea of a Doctor Who novelisation was relatively brand new and he was still going all out; his middle period, where he was cranking them out, but they were solid renditions that expanded on their screen counterparts; and his late period, where they were just the scripts with "said the Doctor" stuck in occasionally.

I haven't read enough of them to know if this is a fair characterization, to be honest, but it does seem to me that if it is, Doctor Who and the Talons of Weng-Chiang and Doctor Who and the Horror of Fang Rock clearly belong to the middle period. I don't think either of these will set your world alight, but it did seem to me that both stories must have engaged Dicks's imagination enough that, like The Pyramids of Mars, he gives the stories enough embellishment and energy to bring it all to life for a reader whether you've seen these stories or not. (I've seen The Talons of Weng-Chiang a number of times over the years, Horror of Fang Rock just the once almost two decades ago.)

I am of the camp that considers Talons one of Doctor Who's best stories, and Dicks captures it on the page well, especially its characters: Tom Baker's moody Doctor and Leela's directness are both on the page, and Dicks does particularly well, I thought, by Jago, Litefoot, and Li H'sen Chang, each of whom gets some nice moments of internal characterization that complements and expands on his screen performance. I imagine there are times cramming a six-parter into (in this edition, anyway) just over one hundred pages could backfire, but it works well here, as we fairly rocket through an engaging story. Dicks clearly enjoyed Robert Holmes's script and brings it to life.

He also does well by his own script in The Horror of Fang Rock, another pseudo-historical of an alien trapped on Earth. There's good period details here, and he (of course, I suppose) captures the complications of the script well. I did find the guest cast somewhat thinner, though. The lighthouse crew are strong enough, actually, but the survivors of the yacht crash don't feel very lively; I'm guessing (it's been a long time since I saw the tv serial) that skilled performers brought them to life more. Still, this is good stuff, especially the early parts where Dicks is setting the scene.

Doctor Who: The Five Doctors (1983)
This is the one book in this volume that's a reread, because I own the individual book (though I don't have an entry for it on my reading log, meaning I must have read it before September 2007, when I started tracking). As novelisations go, this is one of those ones that doesn't really add much to the televised story; it's pretty much the script put on the page. There's no extra bits, no added depth. You could imagine a writer adding more continuity references, or working in stuff that wasn't feasible to do on screen—Dicks, after all, wrote the script, and must have been keenly aware of its limitations!—like giving us more Tom Baker, but he doesn't. Unfortunately, that means it doesn't have much to offer a reader, a modern reader anyway. To be honest, The Five Doctors isn't a very exciting story... but it is a deeply pleasurable one to watch, it's just fun to see all these characters on screen doing their thing in the same story. I enjoyed it even when I was a neophyte Doctor Who fan and had never seen Jon Pertwee or Patrick Troughton in a story before; in fact, I remember even my kid sister (not a classic Who fan by any stretch of the imagination) getting drawn in when I watched the DVD.

But take out Patrick Troughton and Jon Pertwee (and Lis Sladen and Nicholas Courtney and...), and frankly, this story doesn't have a lot going for it. Which is fine for the script, it was meant as a vehicle for seeing old friends again, and it accomplishes that perfectly. But that means on the page, the story has little to recommend it beyond reminding you of a tv story you'd rather be watching. I can see how this would be helpful in 1983, when you had no way to watch the story again, but in 2025, I can just stick in my DVD.

Overall Notes
As of this writing, I've read six novelisations reprinted in the Essential Terrance Dicks range, the five in this volume plus The Dalek Invasion of Earth from volume one; I don't know what happened, but Talons and only Talons contains a large number of typos—missing quotation marks, incorrect words, line breaks in the wrong position. (See the last page of ch. 12 on p. 268 for an example of the latter.) Not having access to the original book, I don't know if this faithfully reproduces an original copyedit that was not careful enough, or if it's a product of whatever OCR process converted these twentieth-century books for a twenty-first-century reprinting.

The volume has, by the way, has a foreword by Robert Webb of Mitchell and Webb fame, and it's a good one. "If I told you that Terrance Dicks taught me to read, I would be exaggerating. But not much."
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Given the lack of quality both in Timewyrm: Genesys and in Terrance Dicks's later writing, I wasn't expecting much out of this... but it turns out that in 1991, Uncle Terrance could still write a cracking Doctor Who adventure like none other. He gloms right onto what makes the seventh Doctor and Ace work, and sends them through a fun adventure: Doctor Who on television probably could never have done the Nazis during its original run, but this takes a lot of those classic tropes of the Doctor show more infiltrating and bamboozling an occupying force, and inserts them right into the Third Reich. The whole thing is just a blast, as this is the Doctor at his most cunning and also his most clownish, pulling one over on the ultimate bad guys, but also being fairly direct about what makes Nazis the ultimate bad guys. I wouldn't have thought that making Hitler the pawns of two different aliens would work, but Dicks pulls it off, and with style. Trad, but with just enough rad to delight, basically the most you could want out of any New Adventure not written by any of the actual "rad" authors. show less

Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

Robert Holmes Author "The Ark in Space", Writer
Gerry Davis Author "Revenge of the Cybermen"
Barry Letts Author, Producer
Terry Nation Author "Genesis of the Daleks"
Steve Cole Editor
Ian Marter Author, Actor
Bob Baker Co-Author "The Sontaran Experiment"
Dave Martin Co-Author "The Sontaran Experiment"
Malorie Blackman Contributor
Julia Jarman Contributor
Bel Mooney Contributor
Vivian French Contributor
Robert Swindells Contributor
Julia Bertagna Contributor
Tom Baker Actor
Colin Baker Narrator
Gary Russell Introduction, Contributor
Anthony Dry Cover artist
Mike Collins Illustrator
Jason Haigh-Ellery Foreword, Director
Martin J. Wiggins Author "Appendix B"
Andrew Pixley Contributing Editor and additional text
Robert Webb Foreword
Derek Carlyle Narrator
Noel Sullivan Narrator
Claire Huckle Narrator
David Banks Narrator
Nadine Cox Narrator
Paul Leonard Contributor
Andrew Miller Contributor
Peter Davison Narrator
Jon Pertwee Narrator
Philip Martin Contributor
Paul McGann Narrator
Peter Anghelides Contributor
Brenda Wyn Jones Translator
Harlan Ellison Introduction, Contributor
Chris Achilleos Illustrator
David Mann Cover artist
Bill Donohoe Cover artist
Michael Moorcock Introduction
Jon Culshaw Narrator
Russell T. Davies Introduction
Alan Willow Illustrator
Stephen Baxter Introduction
Peter Elson Cover artist
Gary Leigh Foreword
Fred Gambino Cover artist
John Lisco Cover designer
Gary Viskupic Cover artist

Statistics

Works
292
Also by
29
Members
23,304
Popularity
#906
Rating
3.2
Reviews
282
ISBNs
717
Languages
12
Favorited
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