Doctor Who and the Carnival of Monsters (novelisation)

 was a novelisation based on the 1973 television serial Carnival of Monsters.

1977 edition
The Doctor and Jo land on a cargo ship crossing the Indian Ocean in the year 1926

Or so they think.

Far away on a planet called Inter Minor, a travelling showman is setting up his live peepshow, watched by an eager audience of space officials

On board ship, a giant hand suddenly appears, grasps the Tardis and withdraws. Without warning, a prehistoric monster rises from the sea to attack

What is happening? Where are they? Only the Doctor realises, with horror, that they might be trapped ...

Chapter titles

 * 1) Dangerous Arrivals
 * 2) The Monster from the Sea
 * 3) The Giant Hand
 * 4) Trapped!
 * 5) Inside the Machine
 * 6) The Monster in the Swamp
 * 7) 'Nothing escapes the Drashigs'
 * 8) The Battle on the Ship
 * 9) Kalik Plans Rebellion
 * 10) The Doctor Takes Over
 * 11) Return to Peril
 * 12) The End of the Scope

Deviations from televised story

 * The introduction makes specific reference to the events of The Three Doctors.
 * The Scope is made more impressive in the novelisation, producing a mild-hypnotic effect that helps draw the viewer into the experience of the scene being viewed.
 * Other creatures such as Ice Warriors are contained within the scope.
 * While in the televised version the Doctor ignited the marsh gas with his sonic screwdriver, he uses a flare pistol in the novelisation.
 * The aggrometer affects the Doctor but not Jo.
 * While in the televised version Jo uses the magnetic core extractor to open the plates, the Doctor uses it in the novelisation.
 * Orum survives, breaks down and confesses everything.

Writing and publishing notes
to be added

Audiobook

 * An unabridged audiobook of the story was recorded by Gabriel Woolf for the RNIB in 1978, alongside The Three Doctors and The Loch Ness Monster. It was only available to the registered blind. More recently in 2014, BBC Audio released a new recording of the story, read by Katy Manning.

British publication history
First publication:
 * Hardback
 * W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd. UK


 * Paperback
 * Target

Re-issues:
 * 70p
 * 1993 Virgin Publishing with a new cover by Alister Pearson priced £3.50 (UK)

Editions published outside Britain
to be added