The
things we see and hear, watch and read in childhood can have a
lasting impact on our lives. They influence us, often in
imperceptible ways, and help shape us into the people we become as
adults. Some have more influence; some have less. Some we’re aware
of; some we’re not.
Some
of my earliest memories are of Doctor Who,
years before I even started watching the programme regularly. My mom
watched it though, and I often caught bits and pieces of it. It
usually terrified me, so I wouldn’t stick around for entire
episodes. Yet, perhaps because of that fear, it imprinted itself on
me. The adventures of the fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith became a
significant
part of my early childhood even if I only partially watched them. I
talked about this a little more when I paid tribute to Elisabeth Sladen in
my review of The Sarah Jane Adventures
episode, “Sky”.
I
started watching Doctor
Who regularly when I was ten
after I saw episode two of “Full Circle”. It hooked me in for
good. Just a few weeks later, the story “State of Decay” began
and that became one of my favourites at the time. This story of the
Great Vampires was written by
a certain Terrance Dicks, a name I would soon come to know very well,
a name that most fans of 60s through 80s Doctor Who
know well.
In
those days, it wasn’t yet
possible to get Doctor Who
on video, so there was no easy way to watch earlier episodes, but I
was determined to learn as much as I could about this show that I had
now become obsessed with. I quickly discovered that there were Doctor
Who books—novelizations of
television stories, a great way to discover older
stories. It was through these books that I got my first experience
with Doctors before
Tom Baker’s fourth Doctor (well, in truth, I discovered I had
actually seen some Jon Pertwee, but I was so young at the time, Tom
Baker had gone on to supplant
Pertwee in my memories; see the above linked tribute to Elisabeth
Sladen for more information about that). I also noticed that a
significantly large number of these novelizations were written by
Terrance Dicks, even in cases where he wasn’t the writer of the
original television episodes.
I
would later learn just how involved Dicks was with the show. Not only
did he write episodes and novelizations, but he had also been script
editor of Doctor Who
from 1968-1974. Along with producer Barry Letts from 1970-1974, he
had overseen the entirety of
the third Doctor’s era. Over the years, his scripts added things
that have gone on to be enduring elements of Doctor Who
lore. He introduced the Time Lords for the first time in the epic
10-episode Patrick Troughton finale “The War Games” in 1969. He
was instrumental in the selection of Tom Baker to play the fourth
Doctor, generally the most well-known and loved Doctor of the classic
series, and he wrote the fourth Doctor’s introductory story,
“Robot”, which helped set the tone for the next seven years. In
“The Brain of Morbius”, he further developed Time Lord history
and introduced the Sisterhood of Karn, who have reappeared in Doctor
Who in recent years. “State
of Decay” added yet more to Time Lord history. His
final script for the TV show was the 20th-anniversary special “The
Five Doctors” in 1983, which managed the incredibly ambitious task
of bringing all five (at the time) incarnations of the Doctor
together at the same time.
But
while “The Five Doctors” might have been his last TV script for
Doctor Who, it was far
from the last thing he wrote. Not
only did he continue to novelize stories, when the first original
Doctor Who novels
began to be released in the 90s, it was only natural that he would
pen one of the earliest. Timewyrm: Exodus
was the second original Doctor Who
novel and it
demonstrated
how a written format could take Doctor Who
in directions that weren’t
possible on the screen.
Dicks would go on to write other Doctor Who
novels as well, including one of my personal favourites, Blood
Harvest, which took readers back
to the location of “State of Decay” and further fleshed out the
lore of the Great Vampires, ancient enemies of the Time Lords.
Dicks
also wrote two Doctor Who
stage plays, Doctor Who and the Daleks in the Seven Keys to
Doomsday and Doctor
Who—The Ultimate Adventure in
1974 and 1989 respectively. He also wrote several scripts for Big
Finish Productions’ audio Doctor Who
series, his final one being a Bernice Summerfield (one of the seventh
Doctor’s companions from the novels he helped start) story in
2011.
Some
of his more recent works include a novelization of The
Sarah Jane Adventures story
Invasion of the Bane.
He also wrote two books for the Doctor Who Quick Reads
series (a book series for young readers), Made of Steel
and Revenge of the Judoon,
both featuring the tenth Doctor. His final Doctor Who
story, “Save Yourself” will be published posthumously in Doctor
Who: The Target Storybook in
October 2019.
But while Doctor Who was a major part of Dicks’s career, it was far from the whole of it.
I
have never met anyone who isn’t a Doctor Who
fan who has heard of Terrance Dicks, and
most Doctor Who fans
know little of his work beyond Doctor Who.
However, the fact is, Dicks was a hugely prolific writer. He wrote
numerous scripts for various television shows, starting with The
Avengers in the 60s. He also
wrote scores of books, most for children. These included The
Baker Street Irregulars, a
series of ten books inspired by the Sherlock Holmes characters. All
in all, Dicks wrote well over 200 books in his lifetime, and while
his Doctor Who books
make up a significant portion of that number, they are not the
majority.
My
early reading and especially writing was heavily shaped by Terrance
Dicks’s Doctor Who
novelizations. Not only did
they inspire me, they helped teach me the art of writing itself. Most
of my early understanding of spelling, grammar, and punctuation came
not from school, but from paying
attention to what Terrance
Dicks did in those books. When I started writing a series of Doctor
Who stories when I was 12 (not
my first ever writing, but my first serious attempt),
I frequently referenced his Target Doctor Who
books to help me along the way. I would sometimes use some of the
ones not written by him, but his tended to be my favourites and the
ones I usually went for.
When
I learned yesterday that Terrance Dicks had died at the age of 84, I
was devastated and heart-broken. This
was a man who had inspired countless children over the decades. For
me personally, my early formative writing years would have been very
different. I would not be the same writer I am now without him.
Farewell,
Terrance Dicks. Rest in peace.
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