New Series Book and DVD Sales

Sunday, 9 October 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
The second batch of three Ninth Doctor novels published by BBC Books in September seems to have followed the pattern set by the initial releases in May. The three novels all sold very strongly in their first week of release, reaching impressive chart positions, before settling down to a smaller but steady sale in the UK. They occupied the top three positions in the chart compiled by Gardners book distributors of the titles for which there was most demand from bookshops, and appeared in the top ten or twenty in various fiction charts published in the UK's press. The three novels debuted in the Top 20 Fiction Heatseeker's Chart (Bookseller/Neilson) as follows:
12 Only Human (1,797 units sold in seven days to 10 September)
14 The Deviant Strain (1,727)
15 The Stealers of Dreams (1,718)
The Bookseller commented on 16 September: "Following a long-running stint in the list earlier this year, Doctor Who makes a comeback with a second batch of three adventures from BBC Books. The new titles retain only one author, Justin Richards, from the first series." All three novels dropped just outside this Top 20 after a couple of weeks, although this is at a time of year when book sales are higher anyway - Top 20 sales in June are generally lower than in October, so broadly similar sales figures will not necessarily secure similar chart positions. With combined sales in their first four weeks at about 30,000, this is a little lower than the equivalent period in May/June, but this is, of course, without the benefit of the publicity from a prime-time television show on BBC One. Panini's Doctor Who Annual 2006 has also sold well, joining the three novels in The Bookseller's Top 20 TV Tie-ins chart, published in today's edition of the trade magazine:
11 Doctor Who Annual (4,915 units in four weeks to 24 September)
12 Only Human (4,826)
13 The Deviant Strain (4,635)
14 The Stealers of Dreams (4,619)
The Bookseller notes that "The [BBC] is also seeing another round of impressive sales for its 'Doctor Who' novelisations. Like the first three books of the regenerated series, life sales of which are nearing 30,000, the three titles in its latest batch all have remarkably similar sales figures." It's perhaps also worth noting that the three novels were in fact on sale for only two of the four weeks covered by this particular chart, and have clearly continued their established sales trend in the couple of weeks since. Meanwhile, the fourth volume of the new series on DVD debuted (and peaked) at no. 2 in the official DVD chart on 11 September, behind The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and is still in the lower reaches of various charts. (Thanks to Steve Tribe)




FILTER: - Books

Back To The Vortex: Editor On The Radio

Sunday, 18 September 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Greetings from your editor... BBC Radio listeners (if you're so inclined) can tune into the following radio programs over the next two days to hear about the Back to the Vortex book, my unofficial and unauthorized guide to the first season of the new Doctor Who series, as I'll be doing interviews with local BBC Radio stations for the next two days on the book from the London studios. The schedule is as follows (all times are half-hours and the interviews will appear at some point during the period):
    Monday, 19 September
  • 10.30-11am: BBC Radio Bristol, with Richard Lewis
  • 11.30am-12pm: BBC Radio Oxford, with Danny Cox
  • 12pm-12.30pm: BBC Radio Hereford and Worcester

    Tuesday, 20 September
  • 9:30-10am: The Tony and Julie Show, BBC Radio Leicester
  • 10am-10:30am: BBC Radio Northampton, with Bernie Keith
  • 11am-11.30am: BBC Radio Kent, with Julie Maddocks
  • 2.10-2.30pm: BBC Radio Swindon/Wiltshire with Mark Seaman
  • 3.30-4pm: BBC Radio Midlands with Danny Kelly




FILTER: - Books - Radio - Radio Times

Through Time

Saturday, 3 September 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Further details for Andrew Cartmel's book Through Time: An Unofficial and Unauthorised History of Doctor Who, published this fall by Continuum Press, have been annonced. "The quirky British television series Doctor Who is a classic both of science fiction and television drama. First broadcast in 1963, it has remained an influential TV presence ever since, with an eagerly anticipated new series airing in 2005. As a vehicle for satire, social commentary, or sheer fantasy adventure, Doctor Who is unparalleled. It was a show created for children, but it was immediately usurped by adults. Arriving at a time of upheaval in the popular arts in Britain, Doctor Who was born into a television tradition influenced by the TV plays of Dennis Potter, the cult television drama The Prisoner, the James Bond films and Stanley KubrickÆs science fiction triptych ù Dr Strangelove, 2001: A Space Odyssey and A Clockwork Orange. A British fantasy adventure that has unfolded across television screens over decades in the tradition of Lewis Carroll, Conan Doyle and HG Wells, the strength of Doctor Who has always been its writers and the ideas they nurtured. In this new history of the show, Andrew Cartmel (who was the script editor on Doctor Who from 1987 to 1990) looks into its social and cultural impact û providing a fascinating read for committed and casual fans alike." The book includes twelve chapters that cover the show's origins, successes, regenerations, overseas sales, fandom and new life in 2005. The revised cover is at right; click on the thumbnail for a larger version. (Thanks to Paul Greaves)




FILTER: - Books

Mad Norwegian Update

Sunday, 28 August 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Mad Norwegian Press have told Outpost Gallifrey that their booksAbout Time 1 by Lawrence Miles and Tat Wood and the new version of A History of the Universe by Lance Parkin should see publication before end of year; however, they are currently without specific release dates. "We certainly apologize for the delay and the continual uncertainty about the release date of these books," Pearson told us. "I can only assure our readers that the sort of ambitious reference guides we're trying to produce aren't easy, and most of our current projects have become more complicated than expected, which requires extra time to get everything right. A book like, say, 'About Time 1' lookedcomparativelyeasy compared to the other 'About Time' volumes, but it's running about 50,000 words longer than projected." The remaining volumes of the "About Time" series will receive definitive release dates as they are near completion. (Thanks to Lars Pearson)




FILTER: - Books

BBC Books Cover Update

Thursday, 25 August 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Amazon.co.uk has revealed two new cover images for the Doctor Who novels being released at the end of this year: Simon Guerrier'sThe Time Travellers starring the First Doctor, Ian and Barbara, and Andrew Cartmel's Atom Bomb Blues starring the Seventh Doctor and Ace. Also, there is now a new, revised cover image for Terrance Dicks' Second Doctor novel World Game; Outpost Gallifrey was informed that the cover illustration previously seen would change slightly at some point, the new cover possessing a different image of Troughton and revised background features. Click on each thumbnail for a larger image.




FILTER: - Books

Back To The Vortex Hardcover

Thursday, 11 August 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Telos Publishing has issued the cover illustration for the limited hardcover edition of Back to the Vortex, the unofficial and unauthorized guide to Doctor Who 2005 by Outpost Gallifrey editor Shaun Lyon. The cover illustration is by Lee Binding, among whose other illustrations are various covers for Big Finish. "The edition will have coloured endpapers and a silk ribbon, and is a signed and numbered limited edition of 500 copies," says Telos editor David Howe. The paperback edition's cover has been widely seen in print magazines (and is on our releases page).




FILTER: - Books

Doctor Who Books Updates

Sunday, 7 August 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Last week's edition of "The Bookseller" focuses on Film and TV Ties-ins, previewing several previously announced forthcoming titles. A Teaspoon and an Open Mind: The Science of Doctor Who by Michael White is published in hardback by Penguin on 3 November, about which the trade magazine says that "This entertaining guide to the real science behind the fictional world of the cult series delves into some of the most fascinating areas of contemporary scientific enquiry in an accessible way. Topics include time travel, alien life forms, telepathy, teleportation, cybernetics, crystals, regeneration, and (naturally) eternal life." Listing it in its "Ones to Watch" section for November, The Bookseller notes that the author will be promoting the book. One of four titles selected for the Film and TV Tie-in "Big Sellers" this Christmas, Panini's Doctor Who Annual 2006 is listed alongside books by Sir David Attenborough and Alan Titchmarsh and another new edition of The Da Vinci Code. Says The Bookseller: "Doctor Who has undoubtedly been the TV success story of the year. Through the simple strategy of making the new series really good Russell T Davies and friends have turned the good Doctor from a low-budget laughing stock into essential Saturday evening family viewing. The spin-off novels have already been a huge success and there is a further slew of titles out in time for Christmas. This is the pick of them, featuring all-new stories from the show's writers, comic strip adventures and behind-the-scenes information. It's guaranteed to be the essential annual for tiny timelords throughout the galaxy." The "Top Title" in the "Children's TV" section is Justin Richards' Doctor Who: The Legend Continues û "Yet more Whoviana, this is a richly illustrated history of the series over five decades. It has features on every one of the TV stories and includes previously unseen photographs. Should appeal both to hardcore fans and more casual purchasers looking for a Who-related gift." And of Doctor Who: Only Human, the magazine says, "One of three new æDoctor Who' novels featuring all-new adventures available in time for Christmas. The first trance sold very strongly and there is no reason to suppose that these won't do just as well. The other titles are The Deviant Strain and The Stealers of Dreams." (It's worth noting that this level of coverage of and interest in Doctor Who books is unprecedented in the trade press, and it is very likely that it will be reflected in the presence and visibility of all these titles in bookshops over the next few months.) Finally, Mark Gatiss's novel, The Vesuvius Club, gets another lease of life in November, this time as a graphic novel.
The analysis of the Tie-ins market makes special mention of the sales success of the first three Ninth Doctor novels: "Undoubtedly the best new story for the BBC so far in 2005 has been æDoctor Who'. Figures published last month showed that the regenerated Time Lord series was the fourth most popular drama in the first half of the year. Only the soap operas æEmmerdale', the troubled æEastEnders' and û top of the pile as usual û æCoronation Street' attracted a greater percentage of viewers. The three tie-in novelisations of æDoctor Who', published as hardbacks and profiting from the attractions of Christopher Ecclestone [sic] and Billie Piper on their jackets, occupy numbers for to six on the fiction tie-in chart for the period with combined sales of nearly 50,000 copies." The three Doctor Who hardcover novels rank #4 (Clockwise Man), 5 (The Monsters Inside) and 6 (Winner Takes All). (Thanks to Steve Tribe)




FILTER: - Books

World Game

Tuesday, 2 August 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Amazon.co.uk have released the cover illustration for World Game, October's BBC Books Second Doctor novel, due out on October 30. Says Amazon, "The Doctor has been captured and put on trial by his own people - accused of their greatest crime: interfering with the affairs of other peoples and planets. He is sentenced to exile on Earth. That much is history. But now the truth can be told - the Doctor did not go straight into exile. First the Time Lords have a task for him. From the trenches of the Great War to the terrors of the French Revolution, the Doctor finds himself on a mission he does not want with a companion he does not like, his life threatened at every turn. Will the Doctor survive to serve his sentence? Or will this adventure prove to be his Waterloo?"




FILTER: - Books

The Doctor Who Annual 2006

Thursday, 21 July 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Published in August, details of the first Doctor Who Annual since 1985 have been featured in the latest DWM. The upcoming annual will feature "Mr Nobody", a comic strip by Scott Gray, John Ross and James Offredi, and four text stories: "The Masks of Makassar" by Paul Cornell; "What I Did on My Christmas Holidays" by Steven Moffat; "Doctor vs. Doctor" by Gareth Roberts; and "Pitter-Patter" by Robert Shearman. Russell T. Davies has contributed two features û "Meet the Doctor" and "Meet Rose" û and Benjamin Cook has a behind-the-scenes report. There will also be puzzles by Gareth Roberts and "a æWho's Who' by Philip MacDonald", as well as a frontispiece by Alister Pearson, "a full-colour illustration of the Doctor and Rose".




FILTER: - DWM - Books

The Shooting Scripts

Tuesday, 21 June 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Below is the cover illustration and cover blurb for Doctor Who: The Shooting Scripts, which has appeared on Amazon.co.uk in the past few days. The book is due out on October 15, 2005. Click on the thumbnail for a larger version of the cover.
Doctor Who: The Shooting Scripts

On the 26th of March 2005, Doctor Who returned to our screens after an absence of 16 years, with a new Doctor, a new assistant and thirteen thrilling new adventures. This book collects together the entire shooting scripts for the first series. Seven of the scripts are by Russell T Davies, with the remainder by Stephen Moffat, Robert Shearman, Paul Cornell and The League of Gentlemen s Mark Gatiss. Each story contains the essential ingredients of time travel, adventure, and the mixing of the ordinary with the fantastical that have always characterized the series, while at the same time being thoroughly in tune with contemporary culture and society. This is a Doctor Who for an age defined by irony, technology and celebrity, and the shadow cast by 9/11. It is also a more cinematic series, with fast cutting and special effects that will satisfy viewers brought up on contemporary film and television sci-fi. The shooting scripts give a unique insight into how the series was visualized and acted. Alongside the exciting action sequences and dialogue are hints about the characters emotions, and evocations of the settings in which their adventures take place. Pacey, atmospheric and thoroughly absorbing, these scripts practically read like novels. Each of the scripts will be illustrated with screen grabs, ensuring the book appeals to broad audience. Introductions by the writers will explain the inspirations for the new series and the fascinating process of creating a Doctor Who script. As the one book that ties directly into the new series, this is a must-have self-purchase or Christmas gift for all Doctor Who fans.




FILTER: - Books