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Malcolm Hulke pictured in 1963. Photo © Studiocanal.
A publicity shot of Patrick Troughton as the Doctor on the set of The War Games, the 1969 serial written by Hulke and Dicks.
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Doctor Who Magazine
REFERENCING THE DOCTOR
I was only a lad, and it was a long time ago, but I
Through the Magic Door
Its enigmatic title promises mystery – yet Doctor Who is perhaps the most forensically documented TV series of all time.
THE HISTORY OF DOCTOR WHO
An imminent production handover prompted story editor Dennis Spooner to create the first Doctor Who episode guide.
Special Occasion
In 1973 the 10th anniversary of Doctor Who was celebrated with a souvenir issue of the BBC’s listings magazine, Radio Times.
MONSTER MASH
The long tradition of highly illustrated Doctor Who reference books can be traced back to a treasured series edited by Terrance Dicks in the 1970s.
STINFO MANIACS
In the days before Doctor Who Magazine, the devotees of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society went to extraordinary lengths to chart the history of their favourite programme.
THE FOUNDATION TRILOGY
In the 1970s, television series were generally seen as disposable products, unworthy of in-depth cataloguing. In the early 1980s, a pair of Doctor Who books by Jean-Marc Lofficier led to a new approach...
MAKING HISTORY
Doctor Who’s first coffee-table book, 1983’s A Celebration, was a publishing phenomenon that accidentally turned author Peter Haining into the show’s ‘official historian’.
TEXTING THE DOCTOR
The most serious, and arguably the most challenging, books about Doctor Who are the numerous cultural studies texts that have appeared since the early 1980s.
MAIL ORDER MAN
For two decades, John Fitton provided an essential service to Doctor Who fans – supplying books and other merchandise direct to their doors.
THE STUFF OF LEGEND
In 1986 Jeremy Bentham earned a place among Doctor Who’s gamechanging authors with a book that featured unprecedented analysis of the William Hartnell era.
The Power of Three
David J Howe, Mark Stammers and Stephen James Walker are jointly responsible for more Doctor Who reference books than any other authors.
Inside the ARCHIVES
With the television series seemingly over, Doctor Who Magazine provided dedicated fans with the most detailed series of retrospective articles it had ever attempted.
A Brief History of Time
Some of Doctor Who’s most dedicated fans and historians have spent years trying to untangle the series’ haphazard continuity.
THE PUBLISHER’S TALE
BBC Books’ Albert DePetrillo explains how Doctor Who’s range of official non-fiction continues to evolve.
THE INDIE SCENE
The advent of digital printing technology has transformed the world of short run, niche publishing. This quiet revolution has left Doctor Who fans spoilt for choice…
WRITERS’ TALES
Written by Russell T Davies and long-time Doctor Who Magazine contributor Benjamin Cook, The Writer’s Tale is a unique chronicle of the series’ twenty-first century production.
GRAPHIC DETAIL
In recent years, ‘infographics’ have brought a new dimension to the presentation of information and data about Doctor Who’s rich and varied history.
THE BOOKKEEPER
Doctor Who’s account brand manager Edward Russell is the ultimate authority on what goes into a reference book.
Historical Accuracy
Doctor Who: The Complete History is arguably the most ambitious reference work ever compiled about this, or any other, television series.
What’s in a Name?
The research that goes into Doctor Who reference books and magazines has helped to define the series itself.
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