Publication Information
Author: Malcolm Hulke
Cover artist: Peter Brookes / Alun Hood (1980)
Illustrations: Alan Willow
Publishing date: August 1975 Episode Information
TV serial: The Green Death
Writer: Robert Sloman
Transmission dates: 19th May - 23rd June 1973 (6 episodes) Fact and Findings
The only novel by Hulke not based on one of his original scripts.
First edition cover price - 35p
In the TV version, the offending chemicals company was named Global Chemicals, but it was discovered there really was a chemicals company called Global and so, for the novel, the name was changed to Panorama Chemicals. Also TV's Dr Ralph Arnold Fell became Dr Arnold Bell in the book.
Classic chapter title - One World, One People, One BOSS! (and a respectable 3/12 on the exclamatiometer!)
This was the last standard novelisation to include a set of illustrations. There were six black and white illustrations by Alan Willow. The illustrations were in all the editions.
Later editions were numbered 29 in the Doctor Who library.
The original Target edition was published by Tandem Publishing (the first new novel not published by the former group Universal-Tandem). The ISBN was 0 426 10647 4. It was reprinted by W. H. Allen in 1980 with a new cover. The ISBN changed to 0 426 11543 0. The novel was reprinted by the same company in 1982.
A hardback edition was finally printed in 1981. Cover Data
The original plan for the first cover was to include Pertwee's face within the O of Who, similar to the use of Baker's face on Doctor Who and the Giant Robot. In Brookes' original sketch, the Jo/maggot box-out is absent.
A larger version of Alun Hood's artwork appears in David J. Howe's book Timeframe (Virgin Publishing Ltd, 1993). UK Editions
YEAR | DATE | PUBLISHER | COVER ARTIST | LOGO | SPINE COLOUR | SPINE NUMBER | TARGET LOGO | ISBN | PRICE | NOTES | OWNED |
1975 | 21st August | Tandem | Brookes | green curve | white | none | colour | 0 426 10647 4 | 35p | first edition, illustration on back | Y |
1976 | April | Tandem | Brookes | green curve | white | none | colour | 0 426 11543 0 | 40p | "second impression", illustration on back | Y |
1977 | 24th March | Tandem | - | - | - | - | - | 0 426 11543 0 | 40p | - | - |
1979 | 29th March | W. H. Allen | Hood | green curve | white | none | colour | 0 426 11543 0 | 60p | "second impression", Wyndham W on back | Y |
1980 | 24th April | W. H. Allen | Hood | green curve | white | none | colour | 0 426 11543 0 | 75p | Wyndham W on back | Y |
1982 | - | W. H. Allen | Hood | green curve | white | none | colour | 0 426 11543 0 | £1.35 | - | Y |
1982 | - | W. H. Allen | - | - | - | - | - | 0 426 11543 0 | £1.50 | - | - |
1983 | - | W. H. Allen | Hood | green curve | white | 29 | colour | 0 426 11543 0 | £1.35 | - | Y |
1985 | - | W. H. Allen | Hood | green curve | white | 29 | outline | 0 426 11543 0 | £1.50 | - | Y |
Miscellaneous
Author
MALCOLM HULKE
Malcolm Hulke has written for the 'Doctor Who' television series since 1965. As well as seven 'Doctor Who' books, he has written several adult novels based on the television series 'Crossroads', and has recently completed Cassell's Parliamentary Dictionary, a new analytical guide.
The author lectures frequently at schools and professional gatherings on the subject of writing. He enjoys travelling abroad as a relaxation from writing, when time allows it.
Malcolm Hulke's first script contribution to Doctor Who was The Faceless Ones for Patrick Troughton's Doctor. This was followed by the epic The War Games (co-writen with Terrance Dicks), leading into a prolific run of adventures for Jon Pertwee's Doctor. He adapted all of his own scripts (with the exception of The Faceless Ones) and even adapted a script by Robert Sloman (The Green Death).
Doctor Who and the Cave Monsters
Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon
Doctor Who and the Sea-Devils
Doctor Who and the Green Death
Doctor Who and the Dinosaur Invasion
Doctor Who and the Space War
Doctor Who and the War Games
Before he began his run of Who adaptations, he wrote, assisted by Terrance Dicks, The Making of Doctor Who for Pan books. It contained imaginative first person re-tellings of the Doctor's adventures from various "official" perspectives. The book was later rewritten and updated by Dicks for Target.
He was a prolific script writer, contributing tales to Danger Man, The Avengers (co-written with Terrance Dicks), Ghost Squad, Gideon's Way, Crossroads (the original series), The Protectors (1964), and Sergeant Cork as well as Doctor Who. He co-created (with Eric Paice) the science-fiction serials Target Luna, Pathfinders in Space, Pathfinders to Mars and Pathfinders to Venus. Also with Paice, he wrote the 1960 British black and white film, The Man in the Back Seat, directed by Vernon Sewell and starring Derren (Tegana) Nesbitt and Keith Faulkner.
As well as adapting his Who serials, Hulke was also busy in the mid-70s adapting stories from the long-running British soap opera Crossroads. The books were A New Beginning (1974), A Warm Breeze (1975), Something Old, Something New (1976) and A Time for Living (1976), all Everest. The books were also published in hardback by White Lion, who, around the same time, had reprinted the original Frederick Muller Doctor Who novelisations with new Fourth Doctor covers.
Non-fiction included compiling Cassell's Parliamentary Dictionary and then in 1974, Hulke wrote Writing for Televison in the 70s, an indispensable handbook for those seeking to write successfully for the medium. This was reprinted in 1976 and reissued in 1980 as Writing for Television. Of particular interest to Doctor Who fans is the section on the making of Carnival of Monsters, and the contributions from Barry Letts, Robert Holmes, Terrance Dicks, Dennis Spooner and Peter Ling (there's also a retelling of the "real"-exploding-church-in-The-Daemons story).
He also devised and edited The Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine and Self-Help, published by Rider and Company in 1978.
In 1976 he spent six months in the USA researching a novel about an airship.
In 1977, Alpine Books released a series of six children's adventure books called Roger Moore and the Crime Fighters (yes, that Roger Moore - in 1977 he was at the height of his Bond acclaim). Alpine was an imprint of Everest Books Ltd line (who also published Hulke's Crossroads novelisations). The authors were Hulke, Robin Smyth, Fielden Hughes, Dulcie Gray, Deben Holt and Anthony Wall. The books were illustrated by Ray Mutimer. Hulke's contribution was The Siege, which was the first in the series. It tells how youngsters Bill, Bonnie and Darren foil an embassy siege and get invited by Roger Moore to form a crimefighters club. Of much interest (and fun) are the book's references to Doctor Who. Firstly, Darren's scruffy dog is called Dalek because his bark sounds like a Dalek saying "Exterminate", only worse. At the book's climax, the villain Grimwood goes to Studio 3 of the BBC Television Centre, where they just happen to be recording a certain SF show. Grimwood has gone to steal a policeman's uniform but he bumps into Roger Moore (!) who's suspicions are aroused when he reasons that Doctor Who probably doesn't require any policemen. The paperback edition had ISBN 0905018 354 and cost 50p.
In 1980 (after Hulke's death), UK publishers Purnell released Purnell's Book of Adventures in Space (SBN 461 044070, 1980), a large format hardback anthology of SF short stories. The contributors on the writing side were Hulke, Fred Baker, David Meredith, John Grant, William Hall, Sydney Bounds, George Beal and Jim Storrie. The book was richly illustrated by several artists including Target cover artist Andrew Skilleter. Hulke wrote six of the short stories and Skilleter illustrated six also, but a story called Mutiny was the only joint collaboration. The book was also released in America as Galactic Adventures, published by Rand McNally. It had SBN 528 82374 4 and was released in 1980. The cover was painted by by Brian Edwards.
Malcolm Hulke died on the 6th of July 1979.
Illustrations
This was the last standard novelisation to include a set of illustrations. There were six black and white illustrations by Alan Willow. The illustrations were in all the editions.