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Book Details

The Adventures of K9 and Other Mechanical Creatures

42.9% complete
1979
1999
1 time
See 23
Introduction - K9's Pedigree
1 - K9's Travels Part I
2 - Inside K9
3 - K9's Travels Part II
4 - K9 Out of Sequence
5 - K9 Defuses A Bomb
6 - K9's Travels Part III
7 - A Maze For Doctor Who
8 - A Space Puzzle
9 - K9's Travels Part IV
10 - Mysterious Parts
11 - A Solar Puzzle
12 - Make Your Own K9
13 - Other Mechanical Marvels Part I
14 - Spot the Mechanoid Difference
15 - Other Mechanical Marvels Part II
16 - A Tardis Puzzle
17 - Dr Who's Gravity Probe
18 - The Giant Robot That Grew
19 - Other Mechanical Marvels Part III
20 - Find the Right Trail
21 - Other Mechanical Marvels Part IV
22 - Quiz Answers
Book Cover
Has a genre Has comments Has a year read Has a rating In my library 
566
No series
Text of book copyright © 1979 by Terrance Dicks
None on file
None on file
Comments may contain spoilers
Got this book on eBay.  It's a kds' book but one more to complete my Doctor Who collection.  Kinda fun too.
Synopsis not on file
Extract not on file

 

Added: 21-Jun-2004
Last Updated: 23-Apr-2020

Publications

 17-Sep-1979
Target Books
Paperback
In my libraryI read this editionOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
17-Sep-1979
Format:
Paperback
Pages*:
94
Read:
Once
Cover Link(s):
Internal ID:
421
Publisher:
ISBN:
0-426-20067-5
ISBN-13:
978-0-426-20067-3
Printing:
1
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Credits:
Andrew Skilleter - Illustrator
Andrew Skilleter  - Cover Artist
Hello!
This is the Doctor.
Here's a book all about my faithful friend, K9.  As you know, K9 is a kind of robot dog - though he'd sooner be described as a completely-mobile, self-powered computer with multi-sensory circuits and built-in defensive capabilities!

I'll also be telling you about some other amazing mechanical creatures I've encountered on my travels through Space and Time - some have been surprisingly friendly, but others were very dangerous indeed…
Cover:
Book Cover
Notes and Comments:

Related

Author(s)

Terrance Dicks  
Birth: 10 May 1935 East Ham, London, England, UK
Death: 29 Aug 2019

Notes:
From the back of the book Warmonger.

Terrance Dicks joined Doctor Who as junior assistant trainee script editor in 1968, when they were making The Web of Fear and desperately trying to  make a roaring Yeti sound less like a flushing lavatory.  He worked on the show during the end of the Patrick Troughton years, and co-wrote The War Games, Troughton's last show, with Malcolm Hulke.  He stayed on as a script editor for the whole of the Jon Pertwee period, and left to write Robot, the first Tom Baker story.  (This was in accordance with an ancient Who tradition, which he'd just invented, that the departing script editor writes the first show of the next season.)

In the years that followed he wrote a handful of Doctor Who scripts, finishing in 1983 with The Five Doctors, the programmes twentieth anniversary special.

In the early 1970s he was in at the very beginning of the Doctor Who novelisation programme and ended up, more by luck than judgment, writing most of them - seventy something in all.  He has since written a number of Doctor Who 'originals', including Exodus, part of the opening Timewyrm sequence published by Virgin, and The Eight Doctors, the first original novel published by BBC Worldwide.

He has written two Doctor Who stage plays, one a flop d'éstime (great reviews, poor audiences), the other a bit of a pantomime but a modest touring success.  He has also written about a hundred non-Who books, fiction and non-fiction for young adults, but nobody ever asks about them.

In over thirty years with the Doctor he has grown older, fatter, greyer and grumpier.  But not noticeably wiser.

Awards

No awards found
*
  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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