Doctor Who and the Curse of Peladon
was written by Brian Hayles, based on his story The Curse of Peladon. It was the 11th story to be
novelized by Target Books.
The early and late Target novelizations have an
interesting trend in common, mainly the fact that television writers and
production teams were the ones primarily adapting their serials. While Terrance Dicks would become the one
most prominently adapting books, Malcolm Hulke, Gerry Davis, Barry Letts, and
important for today’s review, Brian Hayles, took the time to adapt at least
some of their stories. Hulke paved the
way with Doctor Who and the Cave-Monsters and Doctor Who and the Doomsday
Weapon, and Barry Letts followed with Doctor Who and the Daemons in
the second year with Brian Hayles’ Doctor Who and the Curse of Peladon. Upon its release, of the eleven novelizations
Doctor Who and the Curse of Peladon was the most recent serial to be
adapted, only being two years old, tied with The Sea Devils. Brian Hayles would have also recently revisited
Peladon in The Monster of Peladon which would not be adapted for another
five years by Terrance Dicks.
Doctor Who and the Curse of Peladon
is an interesting novelization, simply because Brian Hayles was given a chance
to fully take his scripts outside of the studio bound television production of The
Curse of Peladon along with the costumed budgetary descriptions. Hayles fills the novel with vivid imagery giving
the reader a chance to understand the culture of Peladon and a lot of the
fear. The plot is a beat for beat
recreation of the television story with the alterations made to be adding a
depth of character which was missing from the television story. For instance, King Peladon on television has
this romance with Jo Grant throughout, but you never get an explanation as to
why, but here Hayles expands adding this element that she reminds him of his
mother and the fact that Jo is a human being is what brings the
attraction. There are also descriptors
in the prose that do an excellent job of translating the performances of David
Troughton and Katy Manning. The imagery
doesn’t end there, with Alpha Centauri and Arcturus having more lively
descriptors than what their costumes. Centauri
as a character changes color like a mood ring throughout the novel which is
used to help build up tension and fear while Arcturus comes across much slimier
than on television. If there was one
alien that doesn’t work as well in this example of prose, it would be the Ice
Warriors, who while the plotline with the Doctor judging them is there, that
red herring feels accented which worked better in a visual medium than the
novel form, especially since neither of the previous Ice Warrior stories had
been adapted at this point.
Overall, Doctor Who and the Curse of Peladon doesn’t
change the quality of the television story, offering an alternative take with
some different, more vivid imagery making it work with some almost lyrical
prose from Hayles in the first of two novelizations he would provide to the Target
books range. 9/10.
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