No, there are no plans for any of the modern-era Doctor Who stories to be novelized (as far as I know!), but BBC Books - which is owned now by the same company that owns Virgin Publishing, owners of the Target Books brand - have announced it will be publishing new editions of 6 early-era Doctor Who novelizations on July 7!
http://blogtorwho.blogspot.com/2011/03/classic-novels-republished.html
The books being republished include newly added introductions, the original Target-era cover art, and feature the "classic series" standard logo (which is somewhat controversial, for some reason).
Doctor Who and the Daleks (intro by Neil Gaiman)
Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowman (intro by Stephen Baxter)
Doctor Who and the Cave Monsters (intro by Terrance Dicks)
Doctor Who and the Crusaders (intro by Charlie Higson - author of the Young Bond novels)
Doctor Who and the Cybermen (intro by Gareth Roberts)
Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion (intro by Russell T Davies - which makes perfect sense if you remember who his first villain was in the revival)
As the proud owner of a collection of about 100 of the 154 Target novelisations, it's great to see these books back in print, which means they'll be back in the mainstream bookstores again and out of the back corners of used-bookstore sci-fi (or, as often the case, kiddie lit) sections - or, as is increasingly happening, collector's markets where some of the original books (if you check abebooks.com) are now fetching hundreds of dollars.
It's also significant because it means BBC Books is giving a damn about past Doctors again. Right now they're reissuing the Targets (and I can't imagine they won't publish more, especially ones featuring the Fourth Doctor). But could this also be a signal that we might see original classic-era novels again for the first time since the Past Doctor Adventures line was retired at Christmas 2005? Who knows?
Just as long as BBC Audio doesn't stop making those wonderful unabridged readings. I listened to my first one the other week (Doctor Who and the Planet of the Spiders, read by Lis Sladen) and greatly enjoyed it.
First Tom Baker announces he's coming back as the Fourth Doctor for Big Finish, now the Targets are coming back, and aren't there also supposed to be a pile of Eighth Doctor Adventures being reissued this spring? 2011 is turning into nostalgia central for us older fans!
Alex
http://blogtorwho.blogspot.com/2011/03/classic-novels-republished.html
The books being republished include newly added introductions, the original Target-era cover art, and feature the "classic series" standard logo (which is somewhat controversial, for some reason).
Doctor Who and the Daleks (intro by Neil Gaiman)
Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowman (intro by Stephen Baxter)
Doctor Who and the Cave Monsters (intro by Terrance Dicks)
Doctor Who and the Crusaders (intro by Charlie Higson - author of the Young Bond novels)
Doctor Who and the Cybermen (intro by Gareth Roberts)
Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion (intro by Russell T Davies - which makes perfect sense if you remember who his first villain was in the revival)
As the proud owner of a collection of about 100 of the 154 Target novelisations, it's great to see these books back in print, which means they'll be back in the mainstream bookstores again and out of the back corners of used-bookstore sci-fi (or, as often the case, kiddie lit) sections - or, as is increasingly happening, collector's markets where some of the original books (if you check abebooks.com) are now fetching hundreds of dollars.
It's also significant because it means BBC Books is giving a damn about past Doctors again. Right now they're reissuing the Targets (and I can't imagine they won't publish more, especially ones featuring the Fourth Doctor). But could this also be a signal that we might see original classic-era novels again for the first time since the Past Doctor Adventures line was retired at Christmas 2005? Who knows?
Just as long as BBC Audio doesn't stop making those wonderful unabridged readings. I listened to my first one the other week (Doctor Who and the Planet of the Spiders, read by Lis Sladen) and greatly enjoyed it.
First Tom Baker announces he's coming back as the Fourth Doctor for Big Finish, now the Targets are coming back, and aren't there also supposed to be a pile of Eighth Doctor Adventures being reissued this spring? 2011 is turning into nostalgia central for us older fans!
Alex