Charity publication

Charity publications are releases which are published for the benefit of non-profit organisations or charities. They are not licensed by the BBC or most of the respective copyright holders, and therefore cannot be considered a legal part of the Doctor Who franchise.

Anthologies

 * Drabble Who (September 1993, edited by David J Howe and David Wake, benefiting the RNIB Talking Book Library)
 * Perfect Timing (November 1998, edited by Mark Phippen and Helen Fayle, benefiting the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death)
 * Perfect Timing 2 (December 1999, edited by Helen Fayle and Julian Eales, benefiting the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death)
 * Tales of the Solar System (April 2000, edited by D. Paul Griggs, benefiting the Motor Neurone Disease Association and the Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths)
 * The 13 Crimes of Doctor Who (September 2000)
 * The Cat Who Walked Through Time (February 2001, edited by Thomas Kelly and Alyssa Kelly, benefiting the United Coalition for Animals)
 * Missing Pieces (March 2001, edited by Mark Phippen and J. Shaun Lyon, benefiting the Downs' Syndrome Association and the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death)
 * Walking in Eternity (May 2001, edited by Julian Eales, benefiting the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death)
 * LifeDeath (August 2001, edited by Kereth Cowe-Spigai and Patrick Neighly, benefiting Amnesty International)
 * Shelf Life (December 2008, edited by Julian Eales, David A. McIntee, and Adrian Middleton, benefiting the British Heart Foundation in memory of Craig Hinton)
 * Doctor Who - The Twelve Doctors of Christmas (December 2013)
 * The Temporal Logbook (July 2015, edited by Robert Mammone, Jez Strickley, and Bob Furnell, benefiting the Positive Living Society of British Columbia)
 * Time Shadows (June 2016, edited by Matt Grady and Samuel Gibb, benefiting the Enable Community Foundation and LimbForge)
 * A Target for Tommy (July 2016, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Tommy Donbavand)
 * Seasons of War (July 2016, edited by Declan May, benefiting Cauldwell Children)
 * 101 Claras to See (September 2016, edited by Caitlin Smith and Defne Sastim, benefiting the One to One Children's Fund)
 * Doctor Who and the Fescan Threat (October 2016)
 * A Time Lord for Change (November 2016, edited by Elton Townend Jones, benefiting A Time To Change)
 * Doctor Who: A Time Lord For Change: in an Exciting Adventure with the Drabbles (November 2016)
 * Nine Lives (April 2017, edited by Scott Claringbold, benefiting the MS Society and the Stroke Association)
 * Time Shadows: Second Nature (January 2018, edited by Stephen Hatcher, benefiting the Canadian Organization for Development through Education)
 * A Second Target for Tommy (March 2018, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Tommy Donbavand)
 * The Temporal Logbook II: Further Journeys (June 2018, edited by Robert Mammone and Bob Furnell, benefiting the Mood Disorders Association of British Columbia)
 * The Hybrid: a 12th Doctor & Clara Oswald Charity Zine (October 2018, edited by Ginger Hoesly, benefiting the One to One Children's Fund)
 * Mild Curiosities: An Ian & Barbara Fanzine (December 2018, edited by Sophie Iles and James Bojaciuk, benefiting Breast Cancer Now in memory of Jaqueline Hill)
 * Unbound: Adventures in Time and Space (January 2019, edited by Jacob Black, Frank Holder, James K. Maddox, Anne-Laure Tuduri, and Niki Haringsma, benefiting the Against Malaria Foundation)
 * Defending Earth: The Adventures of Sarah Jane Smith (February 2019, edited by M.H. Norris, benefiting the Cancer Research Institute)
 * Master Pieces: Misadventures in Space and Time (November 2019)
 * Time Scope (July 2020, edited by Matthew Rimmer, benefiting the Scope disability charity)
 * The Curse of Fanfic! (August 2020, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Parkinson's UK)
 * Forgotten Lives (November 2020, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Alzheimer’s Research UK, written by Lance Parkin, Philip Purser-Hallard, Aditya Bidikar, Simon Bucher-Jones, Kara Dennison, Paul Driscoll, Jay Eales, Andrew Hickey, art by Paul Hanley)
 * Twice Upon A Time Scope (December 2020, Edited by Matthew Rimmer, Benefiting the Scope disability charity)
 * Bafflement and Devotion: Iris at the Edges (January 2021, published by Obverse Books, containing reprints of most of the previously published Iris Wildthyme-related short stories from previous charity anthologies, as well as some previously-thought-lost stories from across the internet. Benefiting Project Muyembe. Stories by Paul Magrs, Stewart Sheargold, Lance Parkin, Stuart Douglas, Alan Taylor, Simon Bucher-Jones, Philip Purser-Hallard, and Cody Schell. Art by Blair Bidmead, Jay Eales, Paul Hanley, Bret M Herholz, June Hudson, Jon Huff, Mark Manley, Mark Michalowski, Cody Schell, Johannes Chazot, Zal Cryptid, and William Oxley.

Novels

 * Campaign (September 2000, by Jim Mortimore, benefiting the Bristol Area Down Syndrome Association)
 * Time's Champion (July 2008 and November 2020, by Craig Hinton and Chris McKeon, benefiting the British Heart Foundation)
 * Seasons of War: Gallifrey (August 2018, by Paul Driscoll and Kara Dennison, benefiting Cauldwell Children)

Professor Howe
The Professor Howe series of novels were unofficial parodies of Doctor Who featuring a "rather rubbish" traveler in space and time known as Professor Howe. Beginning in 2017, all proceeds were in aid of Children in Need.


 * Professor Howe and the Toothless Tribe (October 2017)
 * Professor Howe and the Viciousal Vloggers (April 2018, released after the third installment)
 * Professor Howe and the Sinister Sneeze (March 2018)
 * Professor Howe and the Plastic Peril (June 2018)
 * Professor Howe and the Terrible Tarrants (August 2018)
 * Professor Howe and the Shanghaied Scientists (May 2019)
 * Professor Howe and the European Exit (October 2019)
 * Professor Howe and the Furious Foam (March 2020)
 * Professor Howe and the Crafty Count (July 2020)
 * Professor Howe and the Chaotic Courtroom (September 2020)
 * Professor Howe and the Dad Dilemma (December 2020)

Novelisations

 * Doctor Who and the Invasion of Christmas (February 2016, published by Obverse Books, benefiting the Cystic Foundation Trust)
 * Dr. Who and the Daleks (March 2018, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Tommy Donbavand)
 * Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. (March 2018, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Tommy Donbavand)
 * The Tenth Planet Invades the Moonbase (March 2018, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Tommy Donbavand)
 * Dr Who and the Ice Men from Mars (March 2018, published by Obverse Books, benefiting Tommy Donbavand)

Audio charity publications

 * The Nightmare Fair (April 2003, produced by Argolis, benefiting Sense)
 * The Final Game (Summer 2018-Summer 2020, produced by Black Glove Studio/Studio Severn)

The Chronosmith Chronicles
The Chronosmith Chronicles is a Science fiction prose series overseen by Paul Driscoll and Kara Dennison.

Driscoll had previously contributed to the 2016 charity anthology Seasons of War: Tales from a Time War by Declan May. The final story of this anthology, The Horde of Travesties, was written by May and introduced a group known as the Chronosmiths. Following the anthology's release Driscoll and Dennison founded Altrix Books and released the charity novel Seasons of War: Gallifrey, with involvement from May, which featured the Chronosmiths. For this novel Driscoll and Dennison each created two characters; Mordicai and Tor Fasa for Driscoll, and Savalia and Kendo for Dennison.

These four original characters were later featured in Driscoll and Dennison's The Chronosmith Chronicles with two stories, After Vincent and Elanor's Tears, having been released by 2020.

Publications caritatives