Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowmen
was written by Terrance Dicks, based on The Abominable Snowmen by Mervyn
Haisman and Henry Lincoln. It was the 10th
story to be novelized by Target Books.
The Abominable Snowmen
is an interesting choice to adapt as the first Second Doctor novelization. Stories like The Web of Fear, The
Tomb of the Cybermen, and The Ice Warriors were no doubt more popular
and The War Games had both writers adapting serials into the
novelization. But Terrance Dicks had no
real connections to The Abominable Snowmen, not coming onto the show until
The Seeds of Death and not writing until The War Games. His adaptation is interesting, influenced by
his and Barry Letts’ appreciation of Buddhism the novelization adapts character
names to be closer to accurate with the spirituality though this was still a
book written in the mid-1970s by a white man who was not a Buddhist. It doesn’t attempt to be historically
accurate to the past as the story was set in the 1940s (before the UNIT Dating Controversy
began). Doctor Who and the Abominable
Snowmen is an interesting adaptation as it manages to take a six episode
story and speed it up. Six episode
stories are something difficult to adapt into a short page-count and this was
Dicks’ first six-part story novelized as before this he had only done Doctor
Who and the Auton Invasion and Doctor Who and the Day of the Daleks. Each episode gets two chapters, making it a
nice twelve chaptered book on pace, improving the pace of the television story
which languishes in the middle while expansions to the early scenes and the
final battle makes things feel satisfying.
The translation to prose also improves the Yeti themselves, on
television they were far too cuddly, looking almost like giant teddy bears
which would be redesigned for The Web of Fear in a much more effective way. There’s also the fact that Dicks can make the
setting work as a snowy mountain monastery, as on television rain washed away
the snow that was supposed to make the atmosphere work. Dicks is able to make the atmosphere work and
turn the story closer to the horror story that it was intended to be, though
Victoria is still reduced to a screamer as she is still hypnotized halfway through
which is a shame and Jamie feeling more like his characterization in Season 6, which
is the season Dicks worked on.
Overall, Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowmen may
be an improvement from a fairly okay television story, it does feel like a bit
of an oddity since Terrance Dicks didn’t really have a connection to the season
this was adapted from, though he would adapt The Web of Fear to at least
fandom acclaim as it is among the novelizations that people associated as the
story until its recovery in 2013. It’s
good, but not perfect. 7/10.
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