Doctor Who Target Books (Numerical Order) #2

Doctor Who and the Android Invasion

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When the TARDIS materialises just outside a sleepy English village, it appears the Doctor and Sarah Jane are nearly "home" at last. But all is not as it seems in rural paradise. White-suited, gun-wielding guards stalk the countryside, while the village itself is eerily deserted. As the Doctor and Sarah look on, a UNIT member leaps over a cliff to his death and, as the clock strikes twelve, the local pub is suddenly filled with strange robotic villagers. The UNIT member is amongst them, very much alive. What exactly is happening here?

The Doctor is mystified, setting off for UNIT HQ in search of answers. There, with the Brigadier away, Senior Defence Astronaut Guy Crayford holds court. But just who is his shadowy master, the Thraal, Styggron? Indeed, who are the Thraals and what have they got in store for the Earth? Why has the TARDIS dematerialised seemingly of its own accord?

The Doctor must move quickly to find the truth, for the very future of mankind hangs in the balance...

126 pages, Paperback

First published November 16,1978

This edition

Format
126 pages, Paperback
Published
January 1, 1980 by Pinnacle
ISBN
9780523406411
ASIN
052340641X
Language
English
Characters More characters
  • The Fourth Doctor

    The Fourth Doctor

    The Fourth Doctor is an incarnation of the Doctor, the protagonist of the BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who. He was portrayed by Tom Baker for seven consecutive seasons and remains the longest-lived incarnation of the Doctor in the show&apo...

  • Sarah Jane Smith

    Sarah Jane Smith

    Sarah Jane Smith is a fictional character played by Elisabeth Sladen in the long-running British BBC Television science-fiction series Doctor Who and its spin-offs K-9 and Company and The Sarah Jane Adventures.An investigative journalist, Sarah Jane is a ...

  • UNIT

    Unit

    UNIT was a military organisation which operated under the auspices of the United Nations, initially under the name of the United Nations Intelligence Taskforce until being renamed the Unified Intelligence Taskforce. Its remit was to investigate and combat...

  • Harry Sullivan

    Harry Sullivan

    Surgeon-Lieutenant Harry Sullivan was a companion of the Fourth Doctor. He was a Royal Navy surgeon in the employ of UNIT and later worked for NATO and MI5.Three weeks after confronting the Great One on the planet Metebelis III, the Third Doctor and his T...

  • John Benton

    John Benton

    Career Officer with UNIT Councilor (post UNIT?)Doctor Who character then companion beginning with the 2nd Doctor....

  • Kraals

    Kraals

    The Kraals were a race of technologically advanced humanoids native to Oseidon. The ever higher levels of radiation on their homeworld forced them to look for new planets to inhabit....

About the author

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Terrance Dicks was an English writer, best known for his work in television and for writing a large number of popular children's books during the 1970s and 80s.

His break in television came when his friend Malcolm Hulke asked for his help with the writing of an episode of the popular ABC (ITV) action-adventure series The Avengers, on which Dicks received a co-writer's credit on the broadcast. He also wrote for the popular ATV soap opera Crossroads.

In 1968 he was employed as the assistant script editor on the BBC's popular science-fiction series Doctor Who. Dicks went on to become the main script editor on the programme the following year, and earned his first writing credit on the show when he and Hulke co-wrote the epic ten-part story The War Games which closed the sixth season and the era of Second Doctor Patrick Troughton.

Dicks went on to form a highly productive working relationship with incoming Doctor Who producer Barry Letts, working as the script editor on each of Letts' five seasons in charge of the programme from 1970 to 1974. After his departure, Dicks continued to be associated with the programme, writing four more scripts: Robot (1975, the opening story of Tom Baker's era as the Fourth Doctor), The Brain of Morbius (1976), Horror of Fang Rock (1977), State of Decay (1981) and the 20th anniversary special The Five Doctors (1983).

Dicks also contributed heavily to Target Books' range of novelisations of Doctor Who television stories, writing more than sixty of the titles published by the company. In this role, he would attempt to enlist the original teleplay author to write the books whenever possible, but if they could not or would not, then Dicks would often end up writing the books himself (although he also enlisted other writers including one-time Doctor Who actor Ian Marter and former series producer Philip Hinchcliffe). During the 1990s, Dicks contributed to Virgin Publishing's line of full-length, officially-licensed original Doctor Who novels, the New Adventures, which carried on the story of the series following its cancellation as an ongoing television programme in 1989. He wrote the first of the Eighth Doctor Adventures, The Eight Doctors, which was for a time the best-selling original Doctor Who novel. His last piece of Who work is a short story in 2019's The Target Storybook.

It was through his work on Doctor Who books that he became a writer of children's fiction, penning many successful titles during the 1970s and 80s. In 1976, Dicks wrote a trilogy of books published by Target Books called "The Mounties" about a recruit in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. These were followed in 1979–1983 by another Target trilogy "Star Quest", which were later reprinted by Big Finish Productions.Starting in 1978, Dicks began a series called "The Baker Street Irregulars" which eventually ran to ten books, the last being published in 1987. In 1981, Dicks also began a series of six children's horror novels with "Cry Vampire".

1987 saw Dicks start a new series of books for very young children called "T. R. Bear", amounting to a further seven books. These were followed by the "Sally Ann" series about a determined ragdoll, "Magnificent Max" about a cat and "The Adventures of Goliath" about a golden retriever. The Goliath series was Dicks' largest amounting to eighteen books.

He passed away in 2019.


Community Reviews

Rating(3.9 / 5.0, 47 votes)
5 stars
13(28%)
4 stars
16(34%)
3 stars
18(38%)
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47 reviews All reviews
April 26,2025
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Ah, this is how I like my Doctors ... curly-haired and twinkly-eyed. Enough years have passed since I saw the episode and read this book that while familiar, it still held some surprises.
April 26,2025
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http://nhw.livejournal.com/1046178.html#cutid3[return][return]Alas, this was a case where the novelisation exposes the flaws of the original story a bit more; no longer distracted by the visuals of working out who is who, the incoherency of the Kraals' plan to Konkwer Erth is much more difficult to ignore.
April 26,2025
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Original Rating 3

2023 audio re read 3

Not the best of TD adaptations. It doesn’t add anything to the story that I could remember or identify, unlike the better ones.
It has a strong opening, TARDIS landing in English village that is deserted with no sounds of traffic or animal life at all. The apparent suicide of an army corporal and the appearance of space suited persons who immediately try to kill the Doctor and Sarah Jane.
So far so good, but then the story just runs out of steam. The actual plan that the kraal’s are following seems very weak at best if not stupid at worst.
So an okay story from a season that had highs and lows.
The audio is read by Geoffrey Beever who as always does a good job, although unfortunately every time I hear his voice I think of the Master but what can you do about that tbh.

Overall recommendation for completists or those working through the target series (or season 13)
April 26,2025
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Is it cheap to shore up my reading list with Doctor Who books? They're not particularly substantial. Literary snacks, really. Still, I read about a million of these things in the late 1980s, and, as books go, they're the kind of series I always wanted to write - brief, cerebral, pulpy, and prolific. And they look pretty on a shelf all in a row.

That having been said, they're numbered funny. Second on the list is based on a serial released when the TV series was 12 years old. Still, it's not like the story is unfamiliar: it's Doctor Who's take on "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," with android duplicates raining down on England in pods, as spearhead to the Kraal invasion of Earth.

Terrance Dicks could be pretty economical with the stories he was contracted to novelize. His stories challenged the maxim that the book is always better. He does better with better material, but this wasn't a particularly lackluster story to start with, and I had the sense that he was phoning it in.
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