The Unsilent Library: Essays on the Russell T. Davies Era of the new Doctor Who

 was a reference books which focused on Russell T Davies' tenure as Doctor Who's executive producer.

Publisher's summary
The return of Doctor Who to regular TV production after many years of absence has proven to be one of the BBC's greatest successes of the last decade. To a great extent this is down to the distinctive re-invention of the programme by its chief writer and executive producer, Russell T. Davies, and the group of writers — many, like him, long-term Who fans — he assembled. The Unsilent Library examines the storytelling style and techniques of the first five years of the New Doctor Who. Ten in-depth critical essays explore how its writers have updated a series with a history stretching back five decades to stand in the forefront of contemporary science fiction drama.

Subject matter

 * Foreword - Robert Shearman
 * Introduction - Simon Bradshaw, Graham Sleight, and Tony Keen
 * The Big Picture Show: Russell T. Davies's writing for Doctor Who - Graham Sleight
 * The reasons and functions behind the use of deus ex machina in Season One of the New Who - Paul Hawkins
 * He's Not the Messiah: undermining political and religious authority in New Doctor Who - Una McCormack
 * Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane? - Antony Keen
 * How Donna Noble Saved the Multiverse (and Had To Pay for It) - Sydney Duncan and Andy Duncan
 * Does the Doctor Dance? Heterosexuality, Omnisexuality, and Spontaneous Generation in the Whoverse - Catherine Coker
 * Conflict, Hybridity and Forgiveness - James Rose
 * The Importance of Language Converted to Knowledge in the Arsenal of the Tenth Doctor - Leslie McMurtry
 * Philosophies of Time Travel in the New Doctor Who - Richard Burley
 * Approaching Character in the New Doctor Who - Clare Parody

Notable features
to be added