Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

John Peel (writer)

From CartoonWiki
Revision as of 16:10, 15 December 2024 by Arif (talk | contribs) (1 revision imported)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates

Template:Not to be confused withTemplate:Infobox writer

John Peel (born 1954) is a British writer, best known for his TV series tie-in novels and novelisations. He has written under several pseudonyms, including "John Vincent" and "Nicholas Adams". He lives on Long Island, New York. While his wife is a US citizen, Peel continues to travel under a British passport.

Career

During the 1980s, Peel wrote a licensed spin-off novel based on the popular 1960s TV series The Avengers, titled Too Many Targets. He is also known for his various books based on Doctor Who, Star Trek and James Bond Jr. (written as "John Vincent").[1]

Doctor Who books

A friend of the television writer Terry Nation, Peel wrote novelisations of several Doctor Who stories for Target Books featuring Nation's Daleks;[1] he is reportedly one of the few writers to have been willing to do so, given the high percentage of the author's fee that Nation's agents demanded for the rights to use the Daleks. For similar reasons, Peel is one of the few novelists to have used the Daleks in full-length, original Doctor Who novels, examples of which include War of the Daleks (1997) and Legacy of the Daleks (1998), written for the BBC Books Eighth Doctor Adventures range. Neither novel was especially well received by fans of the series, in part due to Peel's re-writing of Dalek history as depicted in the TV series (in particular the destruction of Skaro in the 1988 serial Remembrance of the Daleks), to bring their story more into line with Nation's vision.

With the publication of Timewyrm: Genesys (1991), Peel became the first author to write a full-length Doctor Who novel, featuring the Doctor, not to be based on either a TV or radio script. He had been selected by editor Peter Darvill-Evans to launch the Virgin New Adventures range, to resume the story of the Doctor's travels from where the now-cancelled TV series had left off. He also wrote the Evolution (1994) for their sister range, Missing Adventures (featuring previous Doctors and companions), and also The Gallifrey Chronicles (1991, not to be confused with the Eighth Doctor Adventures book), a compendium of the history of the Doctor's planet, Gallifrey.

Select bibliography

Are You Afraid of the Dark? series

  • The Tale of the Sinister Statues
  • The Tale of the Restless House
  • The Tale of the Zero Hero
  • The Tale of the Three Wishes

Carmen Sandiego series

All published by Western Publishing.

  • Where in America is Carmen Sandiego?
  • Where in America's Past is Carmen Sandiego?
  • Where in Europe is Carmen Sandiego?
  • Where in Space is Carmen Sandiego?
  • Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?
  • Where in the USA is Carmen Sandiego?
  • Where in the USA is Carmen Sandiego, Part II?
  • Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego?
  • Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego, Part II?

Diadem series

The first six books were originally published by Apple. After the cancellation of the series by Apple, they were re-printed by Llewellyn Publications between 2004 and 2005. Books seven through ten were published directly by Llewellyn. Books eleven and twelve were only published in a one-volume edition, by Dragonhome Books, in 2012.

Also published in French by AdA Éditions, under the title Les mondes de la magie du Diadème.

  • Book of Names (August 1997, Paperback , Re-print )
  • Book of Signs (August 1997, Paperback , Re-print )
  • Book of Magic (August 1997, Paperback , Re-print )
  • Book of Thunder (Hardback , Re-print )
  • Book of Earth (February 1998, Paperback , Re-print )
  • Book of Nightmares (April 1998, Paperback , Re-print )
  • Book of War (May 2005, )
  • Book of Oceans (September 2005, )
  • Book of Reality (February 2006, )
  • Book of Doom (June 2006, )
  • Book of Time & Book of Games (November 2012, )

Doctor Who series

Dragonhome Series

  • The Secret of Dragonhome (1998)
  • The Slayers of Dragonhome
  • The Siege Of Dragonhome

Eerie, Indiana series

  • Eerie, Indiana: Bureau of Lost ()
  • Eerie, Indiana: Simon and Marshall's Excellent Adventure ()

James Bond, Jr. series

All published by Puffin Books in 1992 under the pen name "John Vincent".

  • A View to a Thrill
  • The Eiffel Target
  • Sandblast
  • Live And Let's Dance
  • Sword of Death
  • High Stakes

Shockers series

Published by Grosset & Dunlap.

  • Shockers: Alien Prey
  • Shockers: Blood Wolf
  • Shockers: Dead End
  • Shockers: Ghost Lake
  • Shockers: Grave Doubts
  • Shockers: Night Wings

Star Trek: The Next Generation series

  • Here There Be Dragons (1993)
  • The Death of Princes (1997)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Young Adult series

  • Prisoners of Peace (1994)
  • Field Trip (1995)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine series

  • Objective: Bajor (May 1996, )

Tombstones series

Published by Pocket Books in 1995.

  • Dances With Werewolves
  • The Last Drop

2099 series

  • Doomsday (September 1999, )
  • Betrayal (November 1999, )
  • Traitor (January 2000, )
  • Revolution (March 2000, )
  • Meltdown (May 2000, )
  • Firestorm (July 2000, )

Written as "Nicholas Adams"

All published by HarperCollins. "Nicholas Adams" is also the pen name for Debra Doyle and James D. Macdonald.

  • I.O.U. (1991)
  • Santa Claws (1991)
  • Horrorscope (1992, )

Comics

Peel has written Doctor Who comic strips for Doctor Who Monthly:

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Authority control