Charity publications are unofficial releases which are published for the benefit of non-profit organisations or charities featuring characters or concepts from Doctor Who. Contributors have ranged from fully amateur writers and artists up to Doctor Who scriptwriters, novelists and even cast members. They are not licensed by the BBC or most of the respective copyright holders, have usually been available for only limited periods in small print runs, and therefore cannot be considered a legal part of the Doctor Who franchise. Because of this, an admin decision was made in 2011 to not cover these publications in full on this Wiki.
Prose[]
Drabble Who[]
The anthology Drabble Who was edited by David J Howe and David Wake and published in September 1993 to benefit the RNIB Talking Book Library. Each story was exactly 100 words, a format later followed by the charity anthology A Time Lord for Change and the Faction Paradox short story A Hundred Words from a Civil War.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
Introduction | David J. Howe | |
Drabble Rules: The One Hundred Word Variant | David B. Wake | |
Who Counts as One Word? | Dan Abnett | |
Ace's Diary Entry 23rd November 2062 | Sophie Aldred | |
Before the Beginning | Brian Ameringen | |
Mark Four | Peter Anghelides | |
The Myth Makers (As Sung Afterwards By Sundry Bards Other Than Homer) | Geoffrey Arthur | |
Extract from an Address to the Time Lord Academy by Its Regulator Scombos | Colin Baker | |
Centenarian | David Banks | |
A Divertissement | Nigel Bannerman | |
The End | Christopher Barry | |
Paradox | Stephen Baxter | |
Into the Fourth Dimension: The Gowned Time-Traveller | Michael Bell | |
A Tale from a TV Comic | J. Jeremy Bentham | |
Tea for 2 | Ness Bishop | |
To Sarah Jane, Wot I Like Best of All | ||
The Collector | ||
The Most Unkindest Cut of All | Ian Stuart Black | |
Out of the Mouths | Chris Boucher | |
Words of Conquest | Steve Bowkett | |
The Doctor's Greatest Escape | Keith Brooke | |
Time Will Tell | David Burke | |
The Trail of a Timelord | Tim Chapman | |
Unseen Danger | Kevin Chitty | |
Drabble in the TARDIS | Nathan Cooke | |
Shame | Tony Cooke | |
The Tragedy of Errors | Paul Cornell | |
The Who Interviews | ||
Isolation | Fiona Cumming | |
Wheel of Lights | Richard W. Dance | |
Goodbye/Picadilly/Hello/Heatdeath | Peter Darvill-Evans | |
Sarah's Hurt ('Train-Flight': Prologue) | Andrew W. Donkin, Graham S. Brand | |
Rassilon and the Serpent Tongue (An Old Gallifreyan Legend) | Jay Eales | |
Empty Welcome | Stan Eling | |
Hair Today - Wig Tomorrow! | George Evans | |
22nd November, 1963 | Michael Ferguson | |
The Fun Factory | Ian M. Fraser | |
Is That a TARDIS in Your Pocket...? | John Freeman | |
Sweet Dreamer | Stephen Gallagher | |
Future-Speak | David Green | |
Time Out | Mervyn Haisman | |
The Heart-Ache, and the Thousand Natural Shocks | Elizabeth Halliday | |
Brown's Study | Paul Harrington | |
Time Out | Alun Harris | |
The Fall and Rise of the Doctor | Michael Haslett | |
The Ultimate Test | David J. Howe | |
The Dream | ||
An Apocalptic Digital Mistake | Robert Howe | |
Espcape | David Inwood | |
The Cruelty of Time | Simon J. Irving | |
A Suitable Gift (and a Safe One!) | Alison Jacobs | |
The Press and I | Louise Jameson | |
A Mystery Solved? | Steven Jenkins | |
At the Academy | Simon Christopher Jones | |
An Easy Mistake to Make | Andy Lane | |
Days Like Crazy Paving | Glenn Langford | |
A Sort of Elegy | Barry Letts | |
Backwards Ran Sentences as Reeled Minds | Peter Ling | |
A Night Out at the Dog and Bottle | David Martin | |
A Ghost of Christmas Past? | Chaz Mason | |
The TARDIS Bites Back | Becky Maude | |
Aardvark to Dandruff | Tim Maude | |
Different Worlds (Two Extracts from the Doctor's Diary) | Graham McKinnon | |
Doctor Where? | Adrian Middleton, Steve Graeme | |
The Hunt: Sequel to 'Survival' | Brian Milligan | |
Contract Kill | M. R. Morgan | |
Trust Me, I'm a Doctor (The Cafe Royale, New Orleans, 1965.) | Steve Morgan | |
The Academy, First Day | Mark Morris | |
Readacross | Jim Mortimore | |
Hell to Pay | ||
The Other Side of Madness | Amanda Murray | |
Who's Sorry Now | John Nathan-Turner | |
Failsafe | Kate Orman | |
Beetling About in Time | John Peel | |
Questions from the Floor | Victor Pemberton | |
I Don't Wish to Know That - Kindly Leave the Barracks! | Jon Pertwee | |
Victory | Martin Pollard | |
Questions | Eric Pringle | |
"I Am the Doctor" | Justin Richards | |
Celebration | John M. Rimmer | |
Sounds Familiar | Tony Roach | |
Problem Page | Nigel Robinson | |
In the Mirror | Nicholas Royle | |
Clean Up Time | Gary Russell | |
Time-Expired Lord | Robert Sloman | |
The Chase: Princes in the Tower | Chris Sparrow | |
Doppelganger | Mark Stammers | |
The End of "Evil" | ||
Shortly After Armageddon... (On Being Replaced By Astra And Cast Thither By Unknown Forces) | Michael E. P. Stevens | |
In the Midst of Life We Are in Death, Et Cetera | Keith Topping | |
Behind the Sofa: First Memory | David Tulley | |
Tharils | ||
The Monster Man's Lament | ||
Plastic Souls | ||
How Do You Kill Death? | ||
How it Begins | Jan Vincent-Rudzki | |
Sound Effects | David B. Wake | |
Fifty Light Years From Now | ||
A Definitive Reference Work? | Stephen James Walker | |
Two Words | John Wiles | |
A Hundred Words Later | Stephen Wyatt | |
An Unearthly Child | Nigel Robinson | |
Survival |
Perfect Timing[]
- Main article: Perfect Timing
The Perfect Timing series of charity anthologies was edited by Mark Phippen, Helen Fayle, and Julian Eales and published to benefit the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death.
Tales of the Solar System[]
Tales of the Solar System was a charity anthology edited by D. Paul Griggs and released in April 2000 to benefit the Motor Neurone Disease Association and the Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths. Each story was associated with a planet of the Solar System in the Doctor Who universe: Mercury, Lunar, Venus, Mondas, Earth, Mars, Planet 5, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, Charon, Vulcan, and Cassius.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
The All | Ian J. Carter | |
The Loud Lament of the Disconsolate Chimera | Gregg Smith | |
Blue Venus | Paul Leonard | Revisits Venus as in the author's Venusian Lullaby. |
Research and Development | Richard Jones | |
Covert Operations | James Ambuehl | |
Wasteland Express | E.A. Blair | |
Exodus | John S. Drew | |
For Want of a Better World | Martin Day | |
Saturnalia | Lance Parkin | |
Duty Cools | Jon de Burgh Miller | |
Being an extract from "The Amazing Adventures of Iris Wildthyme on Neptune" | Paul Magrs | Features licensed use of Iris Wildthyme. Reprinted in Bafflement & Devotion. |
The Invisible People | Leigh Hooper | |
Who Pays the Ferryman | Helen Fayle | |
Separation Anxiety | Sarah Hadley | |
Watching You, Watching You | James Potter |
Campaign[]
In September 2000 Jim Mortimore published his final draft of the novel Campaign, which had been commissioned by BBC Books for the Past Doctor Adventures range but was rejected for deviating too far from the original pitch. All proceeds from the release went to the Bristol Area Down Syndrome Association.
The 13 Crimes of Doctor Who[]
The 13 Crimes of Doctor Who: Stories of Mystery and Crime Set Within the Doctor Who Universe was a charity anthology edited by Sarah Hadley and released in September 2000.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
A Simple Plan | Mark Phippen | |
Injuring Eternity | Jamie Lawson | |
The Image Immemorial | Rustin L. Shock | |
The Pisces Club | James Ambuehl | |
The Unseen | Jay McIntyre | |
Secret Affadavit | Charles Daniels | |
Trains Running on Time | Nick Campbell | |
The World as a Chequerboard | Sarah Hadley | |
Spoils of War | Timothy Rush | |
Sechee Song | Rebecca K. Dowgiert | |
Dodgy Deals | Trina L. Short | |
Feedback | John H. Toon | |
Erase & Rewind | James Potter |
The Cat Who Walked Through Time[]
The Cat Who Walked Through Time was edited by Thomas and Alryssa Kelly and published in February 2001 to raise funds for a cat shelter in Cincinnati.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
The Real Tale of Bast | Kirstin Jones | |
Food For Thought | Thomas M. Kelly | |
The Purrfect Companion | Sandy Adams | |
The Telling Box | Shaun Lyon | |
Catspaw | Mark Phippen | |
Missing Pages | Gordon Dempster | |
Precious Moments | Greg McElhatton | |
Pull Over! | Andrean Clark | |
Gauge | Leigh Hunt | |
All in a Day's Work | Andrew Lawston | |
Stories[1] | Stuart Bentley | |
Unwelcome Guests | Jim Catapano | |
Time Stalking | Kathryn Sullivan | |
Badge of Honour | Mark Smith | |
Eight Cats | Paul Cornell | |
Stray Mechanism | Stephen Cole | |
The Cat Who Walked Through Sevilla | Tom Beck | |
Keeper of the Peace | Sietel Singh Gill | |
Delayed Reaction[2] | Jennifer Tifft | |
Ripples in the Water | Steve Lake | |
Putting the Cat Out | Peter Adamson | |
Cold in the Sun | Nick Campbell | |
Happy To Be Here! | Annie Marshall | |
A Review of Survival | Peter Anghelides | |
Morphic Resonance | Arnold T. Blumberg | |
The Big Cat[3] | Simon Bucher-Jones | |
Siens Fikshen | Stewart Sheargold | |
Cats and Circuses | Anna "Lyssie" Cotton | |
Done With Mirrors (Present Tension) | Jonathan Dennis | |
Feral Planet | Jay McIntyre | |
A Desperate Venture | Paul Castle and Alex Naylor | |
Talking's Good For You | Matt Marshall | |
Messiah | Lance Parkin | |
The Last of Forever | John Clifford | |
The Cats from Outer Space | Trina L. Short | |
K9? | Naomi Jacobs | |
Territorial Markings[4] | Dale Smith | |
Doctor's Orders | Heidi Linda | |
The Cat at the End of the Lane | James Enright | |
Doctor Who and the Terror of the Rani | Alden Bates | |
Whovian Rhapsody | Erik Pollitt | |
A Dinner in Belgravia[5] | Diane Duane | |
GMO | Kate Orman | |
The Cat's Eye Diamond | Timothy Rush | |
Broken Dreams | Alryssa Kelly | |
A Beautiful Day | James Ambuehl and Sarah Hadley | |
Crescendo | Susannah Tiller | |
Mr Tibbles Saves the World | John H. Toon | |
Bad Dog | Christopher Taylor |
A second volume, The Cat Who Walked Through Time II, was announced for the benefit of the United Coalition of Animals, but plans ultimately fell through. Nonetheless, several stories written for the volume were later released by their authors, including Simon Bucher-Jones' Mr Kitling's Cakes[6] and Jonathan Dennis' Gramps, which was ultimately published in A Romance in Twelve Parts.
Missing Pieces[]
- Main article: Missing Pieces
Missing Pieces was a charity anthology edited by Mark Phippen and Shaun Lyon and released in March 2001, benefiting the Downs' Syndrome Association and the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death.
Walking in Eternity[]
- Main article: Walking in Eternity
The charity anthology Walking in Eternity was edited by Julian Eales and released in May 2001 for the benefit of the Study of Infant Death.
LifeDeath[]
LifeDeath, an anthology edited by Kereth Cowe-Spigai and Patrick Neighly, was released in August 2001 to benefit Amnesty International.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
My Brother and the Doctor | Ben Brown | |
At the Beach[7] | Simon Bucher-Jones | |
Something Terribly Important | Evan Eaters | |
And Act of Terrorism | William Billingsley | |
Hayat | Doris Speed-Keller | |
Raisin Jack and the Dead Gang | Chris Heffernan | |
The Unpublished Diaries of Ian Chesterton | Patrick Neighly | |
Act of Kindness | Alex Steer | |
Interlude | Peter Anghelides, Stephen Cole | |
Who Tortures the Torturers? | James Enright | |
Meeting of Minds | Craig Hinton | |
Liberation | Kereth Cowe-Spigai | |
Key to the Future | Mark Phippen | |
Seasons of Fear | Paul Cornell | A novelisation of the original script of Seasons of Fear. |
Grandmother Clause | Phil Pascoe | |
Going Nowhere | David Agnew | |
Skullduggery | Keith Topping, Suzanne M. Campagna |
Time's Champion[]
In July 2008, Chris McKeon published his completion of the novel Time's Champion, based on Craig Hinton's outline and notes. All proceeds went to the British Heart Foundation. The book was reprinted in November 2020.
Shelf Life[]
- Main article: Shelf Life
Following Craig Hinton's death by heart attack, the charity anthology Shelf Life was released in December 2008 to benefit the British Heart Foundation. It was edited by Julian Eales, David A. McIntee, and Adrian Middleton and dedicated to Hinton's memory.
Voices from the Past[]
Released on 4 May 2011, this e-book only charity anthology contained a The Brenda and Effie Mysteries short story. It was later reprinted in Team Up.
Title | Author | Notes |
---|---|---|
The Curious Package | Paul Magrs | Features Brenda and Effie Jacobs. |
The Twelve Doctors of Christmas[]
Doctor Who - The Twelve Doctors of Christmas was a charity anthology edited by John Davies and released December 2013 to benefit the National Autistic Society.
Title | Author | Notes |
---|---|---|
The Impossible Pear Tree | Lee Rawlings | |
Victoria 'n' Christmas | John Davies | |
Dr. Hope and Dr. Faith | Michael S. Collins | |
Time Lords Who Lunch | Declan May | |
Gaudi Night | Mark Clapham | |
The Doctor's Portial to Christmas | Tony Eccles | |
A Flight Before Christmas | Dan Barratt | |
Maid of Eight | J.R. Southall | |
Always Christmas | Jon Arnold | |
The Stocking Killers | Simon Brett | |
The Intelligence Strikes Back | John Davies | |
"Thus the Whirligig of Time..." | M. William Anderson |
Temporal Logbook[]
The Temporal Logbook series of charity anthologies released to benefit charities in British Columbia.
The Temporal Logbook[]
In July 2015, The Temporal Logbook was released to benefit the Positive Living Society of British Columbia. The anthology was edited by Robert Mammone, Jez Strickley, and Bob Furnell.
The Temporal Logbook II[]
In June 2018, The Temporal Logbook II: Further Journeys was released to benefit the Mood Disorders Association of British Columbia. It was edited by Robert Mammone and Bob Furnell. The anthology had contributions from Tony Jones, Russell McGee, and Rob Nisbet, among others.
The Temporal Logbook III[]
In September 2022, The Temporal Logbook III: Changed Lives was released to benefit Settled. Settled helps to ensure that EU citizens gain Settled Status in the UK. It was edited by James Silvester. The anthology had contributions from Russell McGee, and Rob Nisbet, among others.
Christmas special novelisations[]
Starting in February 2016, Obverse Books released three unofficial novelisations of Doctor Who Christmas specials in aid of the Cystic Foundation Trust. The books were credited to "The Midnight Folk", a pseudonym for a writing group which included Paul Magrs, Andrew Hickey, Stuart Douglas, Nick Campbell, James Gent, Ira Lightman, Ian Potter, Philip Craggs, and Matthew Bright.
Title | Notes |
---|---|
Doctor Who and the Invasion of Christmas | A novelisation of The Christmas Invasion in the style of a 1970s Target novelisation. Predates the publication of an actual Target novelisation of the story. |
The Christmas Bride | A novelisation of The Runaway Bride in the style of an early 1980s Target novelisation. |
The Christmas Voyage | A novelisation of Voyage of the Damned in the style of a late 1980s Target novelisation. |
Time Shadows[]
Two charity anthologies were released in the Time Shadows series.
Time Shadows[]
Time Shadows was edited by Matt Grady and Samuel Gibb and released in June 2016 to benefit the Enable Community Foundation and LimbForge.
Second Nature[]
Time Shadows: Second Nature was released in January 2018 for the benefit of the Canadian Organization for Development through Education. It was edited by Stephen Hatcher.
A Target for ...[]
Obverse Books published a number of charity books first to help fund Tommy Donbavand's recovery from cancer., and then other good causes
A Target for Tommy[]
A Target for Tommy was edited by Stuart Douglas and Paul Magrs and released in July 2016.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
Street of Scream | Sharon Tregenza | |
Curse of the Bog Women | Barry Hutchison | |
Miss Hawthorne and the Alpaca of Doom | Paul Magrs | |
The Triplet Impertinence | Andrew Jones | |
Sweetie | Sarah Hadley | |
The Blurred Man | Elton Townend Jones | |
The Time Wrestlers | Lawrence Burton | Features licensed use of Señor 105. |
The Channel Hoppers | Daniel Blythe | |
The Bogeyman | Andrew Hickey | |
Time War Cutaway | Andrew Lawston | |
The Secret Keeper | Nick Campbell | |
Doctor Who and the Vikings | Kara Dennison | |
Eyebrows and Fish | Matthew Bright | |
@allnewdoctorwho | Nick Wallace | |
The Doctor and the Witch | Rachel Redhead | |
What the Who? | Philip Ardagh | |
The Palace | Philip Marsh | |
The Other Three Doctors | Iain McLaughlin | |
Deus Ex Food Machine | Roy Gill | |
Leo Reflects | Ian Potter | |
C♦O♦M♦P♦A♦N♦I♦O♦N♦S | Simon A. Forward | |
Significant Others | Blair Bidmead | Features licensed use of Theo Possible. |
Mapp, Lucia, and the Lords of Time | Stuart Douglas | |
Director's Cut | Una McCormack | |
The Ox Bow Train[8] | Simon Bucher-Jones | |
Rock'n'Roll Alien | Stewart Sheargold | |
The Last Doctor[9] | Paul Cornell | |
Doctor Who and the Mytex Power | Stephen Cole | Written by Cole at age 11. |
A Second Target for Tommy[]
A Second Target for Tommy was released in March 2018.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
Eye of Orion? | Jay Eales | |
The Hangover of Injustice | Andrew Lawston | |
The Caterpillar Room | Kate Orman | A short sequel to The Year of Intelligent Tigers. |
Fearmonger Redux (excerpt) | Jon Blum | |
Nipping Out For Some Bits | Ian Potter | |
The Misadventure of Mark Thorne | ||
Wherever and Whenever | Cody Schell | |
From Skaro With Love! | Nick Campbell | |
Horde of Travesties - the Prologues: The Man in the Tree | Declan May | |
Why Though? | Ira Lightman | |
The Runaway Hi-Fi[10] | Paul Magrs | Features an alternate origin for Panda, also featuring the "Katy Manning" Iris. |
Eyebrows and Fish | Matt Bright | |
The Xanthous Knight[11] | Blair Bidmead | |
Repeat Prescription | Eddie Robson | |
Doctor Who: The Special | Steven Moffat | A deleted Ninth Doctor scene from an early draft of The Day of the Doctor. |
- | Philip Marsh | |
The Watcher | Nick Wallace | |
Collateral Damage | Matt Barber | |
The Envelope Please | Jonathan Dennis | |
The Thief of Joy | Jon Arnold | |
Doctor Who and the Exile From Hell | Simon Bucher-Jones | |
When Iris Met Billy | Stuart Douglas | Republished in Bafflement & Devotion and, with unlicensed names changed, as First Meetings in Iris: Abroad. |
The Same Old Road | Ian Potter | |
Walk A Mile In My Shoes | Jay Eales | |
Fair | Ned Netherwood |
A Target for Antoni[]
A Target for Antoni, raising funds to help Antoni Fletcher-Goldspink during their final illness, was released in 2021.
- Doctor Who Haiku: for Antoni – Julie Hesmondhalgh
- Luna – Katy Manning
- Spa Day – David Richards
- The Soundless Ones – Stewart Sheargold
- The Lost Series of Jago & Litefoot – Matthew Bright
- I Was A Teenage Sex-Bondage Slave On Miasimia Goria – The Planet Of Pain – John Ainsworth
- NOMOPHOBIA – Paul Burns
- Dr Who and The Faceless Machines – Robin Bland
- The Invisible Light – Richard Unwin
- Old Friends – Jenny Shirt
- Sweet or Salted – Sophie Iles
- Doctor Who: The Purple Hat – Antonio Rastelli
- Season 13 – Paul Magrs
- Hot Date – Nigel Fairs
- Doctor Who and the Last Taniwha – Brad Wolfe
- RuPanda’s Jamboree Show- Rylan John Cavell
- Generations – Roy Gill
- Doctor Who: The Baba And The Lost – Paul Phipps-Williams
- The Past Is What You Can Remember – Neil Chester
- Return To Devils End – Paul Burns
- TBA – Joe Lidster
Cushing novelisations[]
In March 2019 Obverse Books published four novels featuring Peter Cushing's Dr. Who to benefit Tommy Donbavand. They were anonymously written by a well-known Doctor Who author[12] and attributed to "Alan Smithee". Each book in the series contains a purportedly non-fiction introduction, an extract from the book From Shepperton to Skaro by Michael Loggins.
Title | Notes |
---|---|
Dr Who and the Daleks | A novelisation of Dr. Who and the Daleks. |
Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. | A novelisation of Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.. |
Dr Who and the Ice Men from Mars | A novelisation of an imagined film adaptation of The Ice Warriors. |
The Tenth Planet Invades the Moonbase | A novelisation of an imagined film adaptation of The Tenth Planet. |
A second set of four "novelisations" were released and attributed to David Agnew. As Donbavand had passed at that time, proceeds were donated to the National Health Service for the COVID-19 pandemic under the banner A Target for the NHS.
Title | Notes |
---|---|
Dr. Who and the Yeti Invasion of London | A novelisation of an imagined film adaptation of The Web of Fear. |
Dr Who: Journey into Time | An anthology of adaptations of an imagined six-episode continuation of Journey into Time. |
Dr Who and the Auton Attack | A novelisation of an imagined film adaptation of Spearhead from Space and Terror of the Autons. |
Dr Who and the Curse of the Dæmons | A novelisation of an imagined film adaptation of The Dæmons. |
Following the inclusion of a short story entitled Dr Who and the Faceless Machines in A Target for Antoni, attributed to Robin Bland, a further novelisation by "Bland" appeared in March 2022, with proceeds benefitting the British Heart Foundation in the name of Paul Lynas, followed by an anthology Missions to the Unknown and a novelisation Claus of Axos.
Title | Notes |
---|---|
Dr Who: Escape to Danger | |
Dr Who: Missions to the Unknown | |
Dr Who: Claus of Axos | |
Dr Who’s Greatest Adventure |
Seasons of War[]
- Main article: Seasons of War
Seasons of War was a series of unlicensed Doctor Who books published for the benefit of Cauldwell Children. The stories featured the War Doctor and were set during the Last Great Time War.
101 Claras to See[]
101 Claras to See was a charity anthology edited by Caitlin Smith and Defne Sastim, with contributors including Elizabeth Sandifer. Named in reference to 101 Places to See, it included 101 pieces of art, fiction, and essays about Clara Oswald. It was released September 2016 to benefit the One to One Children's Fund, a charity for which Jenna Coleman was an ambassador.
The Fescan Threat[]
Doctor Who and the Fescan Threat was a "Choose Your Own Adventure" book written by Christopher Samuel Stone and released in October 2016 to benefit MIND, the mental health charity.
A Time Lord for Change[]
A Time Lord for Change in an Exciting Adventure with the Drabbles was edited by Elton Townend Jones, featuring many "prominent names from Doctor Who itself", such as Colin Baker and Andrew Cartmel, and was published in November 2016 to benefit MIND and Rethink Mental Illness' "Time to Change" mental health campaign. Like Drabble Who 23 years prior, it was an anthology of hundred-word drabbles: specifically, one for each episode of Doctor Who.
Nine Lives[]
Nine Lives was edited by Scott Claringbold and released by Red Ted Books in April 2017 to benefit the MS Society and the Stroke Association. Each story featured the Ninth Doctor from Scream of the Shalka and his companion Alison Cheney. The anthology was notably released one month after Obverse Books' Black Archive reference book Scream of the Shalka.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
Foreword | Paul Cornell | |
Prologue | Scott Claringbold | |
The Freelance Gardener | Kevin Candela | |
A Storm Approaches | Nathan Mullins | |
Six Green Bottles | Jamie Hailstone | |
Dark Media | Kara Dennison | |
Breaking the Fourth | Rachel Redhead | Features Judy Collins and references the Raithaduine. |
The Prototype | Stuart Douglas | |
The Library on Barnes Common | Nick Campbell | |
The Curse of the Time Lords | Paul Driscoll | |
Frozen in Time | Daniel Tessier | |
Sleeper Awakes | Scott Claringbold |
Easy Dalekese[]
Easy Dalekese was published by Obverse Books in 2017, and edited by Finn Clark, for the benefits of Children in Need. It explored the various representation of the Dalek language throughout Doctor Who, and the linguistic rules of it.
Whoblique Strategies[]
Published by Chinbeard Books in 2017, and edited by Elton Townend Jones, Whoblique Strategies is a collection of short fiction pieces mixing the work of Brian Eno and David Bowie with the world of Doctor Who to create something new. All proceeds were donated to Children in Need.
Professor Howe[]
The Professor Howe series of parody novels featured a "rather rubbish" traveller in space and time known as Professor Howe. All proceeds were donated to Children in Need.
Title | Writer | Release date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Professor Howe and the Toothless Tribe | Christopher Samuel Stone | October 2017 | |
Professor Howe and the Viciousal Vloggers | Ian K. Cimm | April 2018 | Released after the third instalment. |
Professor Howe and the Sinister Sneeze | Ann Worrall | March 2018 | |
Professor Howe and the Plastic Peril | Jamie Hailstone | June 2018 | |
Professor Howe and the Terrible Tarrants | Christopher Samuel Stone | August 2018 | |
Professor Howe and the Shanghaied Scientists | Jamie Hailstone | May 2019 | |
Professor Howe and the European Exit | Christopher Samuel Stone | October 2019 | |
Professor Howe and the Furious Foam | Simon Bucher-Jones | March 2020 | |
Professor Howe and the Crafty Count | Jamie Hailstone | July 2020 | |
Professor Howe and the Chaotic Courtroom | Don Klees | September 2020 | |
Professor Howe and the Dad Dilemma | Lisa Hamlin | December 2020 | |
Professor Howe and the Holy Hotel | Paul Driscoll |
Children of Time[]
Children of Time: The Companions of Doctor Who was a collection of essays and non-fiction commentaries on various Doctor Who companion throughout the history of the franchise. It was published by kOZMIC PRESS in May 2018, and edited by R. Alan Siler and Drew Meyer. It included contributions from various actors, such as Mark Strickson, Katy Manning and Daphne Ashbrook. All proceeds were donated to the charity Furkids.
A Pile of Good Things[]
A Pile of Good Things: an 11th Doctor Charity Zine was released in 2018. It was edited by Ginger Hoesly. All profits were donated to The Cancer Research Institute.
The Hybrid[]
The Hybrid: a 12th Doctor & Clara Oswald Charity Zine was released in October 2018. It was edited by Ginger Hoesly with Sophie Iles as a contributing artist and Kara Dennison among the contributing writers, and all proceeds were donated to the One to One Children's Fund.
Mild Curiosities[]
Mild Curiosities: An Ian & Barbara Fanzine was a charity anthology edited by Sophie Iles and James Bojaciuk. It was released in December 2018 for the benefit of Breast Cancer Now, in memory of Jacqueline Hill.
Unbound[]
Unbound: Adventures in Time and Space was released in January 2019 to benefit the Against Malaria Foundation. It was edited by Jayce Black, Frank Holder, James Maddox, Anne-Laure Tuduri, and Niki Haringsma. In the style of Big Finish Productions' Unbound series, each story featured another "What if" story in the Doctor Who universe.
Defending Earth[]
Defending Earth: The Adventures of Sarah Jane Smith was a charity anthology edited by M.H. Norris, involved the work of Sophie Iles and others, and released in February 2019 to benefit the Cancer Research Institute.
Master Pieces[]
Master Pieces: Misadventures in Space and Time was edited by Paul Driscoll and released in November 2019 to benefit The Stroke Association. It featured the work of writers like Tim Gambrell and Iain McLaughlin.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
Bandages | Chris McKeon | |
The House on McQueen Street | Scott Claringbold | |
Everything He Ever Wanted | Mike Morgan | |
Master Chef | Lee Rawlings | |
Conversion Therapy | Paul Driscoll | |
Fallen Angel | Dan Barratt | |
Pulling Wings Off Flies | Jon Arnold | |
The Greater of Two Evils | Mark McManus | |
An Alien Aspect | Richard Gurl | |
Plaything | Tim Gambrell | |
Parental Controls | Daniel Wealands | |
Splinter of Eternity | Iain McLaughlin | Features licensed use of Erimem and Erimem series characters. |
The Devil You Know | Daniel Tessier | |
One Night in Wartime | Stephen Hatcher | |
The Patient | Tim Gambrell | |
Quod Periit, Periit | Simon A Brett | |
Cheese, Beans, and Toast | Sami Kelsh | |
Auntie Mary | Kara Dennison | |
The Diamond of the Gods | Nathan Mullins | |
The Shell Game | Rachel Redhead | |
Viva La Vera | Paul Driscoll |
Time Scope[]
The Time Scope charity anthologies were edited by Matthew Rimmer and benefitted Scope, the disability equality charity.
Time Scope[]
Time Scope was released in July 2020.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
A Fight For Change | Linda Puchala | |
The Journey Begins | Jon Arnold | |
The Eye of the Beholder | Jonathan Bunney | |
Returning Susan | Paul J. Guest | |
A Connection of Years Since | Edward Buckton | |
The Jobless One | Martin Belam | |
A Nobby One | Michael Dennis | |
Paper Chase | Toby Hadoke | |
Incoming Transmission | Katy Manning | A formally untitled poem. |
An Unexpected Interlude | Don Klees | |
Friends and Monsters | James Goss | |
Distance, Not Distant | Justin Bush | |
Reflection | Antonio Amaral | |
The Mega - Prologue | Simon Guerrier | A deleted scene from The Mega. |
Blue Monday | Ian Morgan | |
Powerdown | Patrick McCafferty | |
Helix | Ian Morgan | |
Working From TARDIS | Mike Morgan | |
Dysconnection' | Joseph Jones | |
Sara Kingdom Trilogy Part 4 | Simon Guerrier | Outlines the unproduced audio story Survivors. |
The Furlough of Turlough | Matthew Rimmer | |
The Botcherby Inheritance | Pete Lambert | |
Graphic Finance | Steve Woolfall | |
Time and Tide | Martin Montague | |
Time Flies | Rae Marie | |
Practical Optics for Time-Travellers | Kitty Eden | |
Heroes | Ben Rawson-Jones | |
Sound Asleep | Matthew Rimmer | |
Rhyme and the Rani | James Goss | A previously-unpublished poem originally intended for Now We Are Six Hundred. |
Aces Low | Charlotte Pringle | |
In The Soup | Steve Woolfall | |
Salute | James Hawkins | |
Redecorating | Oliver S. Jackson | |
Far More | J.E. Remy | |
Get Me Out Of Here | Geoffrey D. Wessel | |
Stranded | Gabriel Keogh | |
Planet of the Hats | Matthew Rimmer | |
Something Familiar | Paul Burns | |
Luminary | William Carter | |
The Reward | Bobble Bardsley | |
Love At First Touch | E. J. Coates | |
Treasure The Stars | Alec Hepburn | |
The Old Man and The Stranger | James Postans | |
The Gift Outside | Samuel Johnstone | |
The Loneliness Of A Time Traveller | Ben Coleman | |
Lunchtime | David R. Johnstone | |
Talent | Strange Seawolf | |
Only The Lights | E.J. Robison | |
Good Company | Strange Seawolf | |
Note To Self | Dave Ladkin | |
A Remedy of Sorts | Jamie H. Cowan | |
Words for the Overture | Blair Mowat | Adapts the opening scene of Queen of Rhodia. |
Absent Friends | Dewi Small | |
Auld Acquaintances | Ben Tedds | |
Art and the Lecturer | Dominic G. Martin | |
Regeneration | Sam 'Jesta' Geden | |
Message Begins | Rogan Clark | |
Who Loves Ya? | Martin Holmes | |
Smoke and Air | Mat Greenfield | |
Homecoming | Matthew Rimmer |
Twice Upon a Time Scope[]
Twice Upon a Time Scope was released in winter 2020. Alongside the listed stories, it also included art and memories of working on the show from cast and crew including Nicola Bryant and Neve McIntosh.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
The TARDIS That Stole Christmas | E.J. Robison | |
The Christmas Club | Matthew Rimmer | |
Moments In Time | Jamie H. Cowan | |
A Victoria Christmas | Paul J. Guest | |
Red Velvet | Alice Dryden | |
Lights | Richard Orr | |
The Christmas Wizard | Martin Montague | |
The Nightmare Present | Paul Burns | |
The Frenzy of Advent | Joseph Jones | |
The Big Pink Box | Bryan Simcott | |
God Rest Ye Merry Cybermen | Ben Rawson-Jones | |
Christmas Time | Trevor Baxendale | |
O Christmas Tree, O Christmas Tree | Alec Hepburn | |
Christmas on Zarogon | Jonathan Bunney | |
A Christmas Off-World | Nathan Mullins | |
Conversations With People You Haven't Met Yet | Mike Morgan | |
Mayfly | William Carter | |
Photographic Memory | Sam 'Jesta' Geden | |
Grace Under Pressure | Matthew Rimmer | |
The War on Christmas | ||
A Deleted Scene From The Juror's Story | Eddie Robson | Presents a deleted scene from an earlier draft of The Juror's Story from Short Trips: Repercussions. |
The Holly And The Doctor | Ian Morgan | |
What Jackie Did Next | Samuel Johnstone | |
How the Graske Stole Christmas | E.J. Coates | |
Christmas in Croydon | Matthew Rimmer | |
Have Yourself A Torchwood Little Christmas | Samuel Johnstone | |
It's A Bug's Wonderful Life | Matthew Rimmer | |
The Jack Who Stole Christmas | Cornelius Blanc | Featuring licensed use of Linda Moss and the Boehemoth from Doctor Who: Lockdown! Fan Gallery. |
Sarah Jane's Christmas | Steve Woolfall | |
Last Night on Mars | William Carter | |
Christmas on Paternoster Row | Oliver S. Jackson | |
Christmas in Paris | Matthew Rimmer | |
Christmas for Christmas | Mercury A.O.C.A | |
I Don't Believe in Ghosts | Jonathan Morris | |
What's in the Box? | Bobble Bardsley | |
The Christmas of the Doctor | David R. Johnstone | |
Single Booking | Oliver Dallas | |
The Naxos Invasion | Ian Morgan | |
(Not So) Silent Night | Dewi Small | |
Something in the Water | James Hawkins | |
The Twelve Docs of Christmas | Bobble Bardsley | |
23:59 | William Carter |
The Curse of Fanfic![]
Obverse Books released an anthology of unlicensed crossover stories called The Curse of Fanfic! in August 2020 to benefit Parkinson's UK. It was edited by Paul Castle and included 26 stories, three of which were crossovers with the Doctor Who universe.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
The Fox Files[13][14] | Paul Magrs | |
Gadget Goes to Launch | Daniel Tessier | |
It's Raining Gin | Jon Arnold | Features the "Katy Manning" Iris, Panda, and the Celestial Omnibus. |
Tomorrow the Rat | Simon Bucher-Jones | Crossed over with the Doctor in an online coda.[15] |
Forgotten Lives[]
Forgotten Lives[]
Forgotten Lives was edited by Philip Purser-Hallard and published by Obverse Books in November 2020 to benefit Alzheimer's Research UK. Each story featured another one of the "Morbius" Doctors, as well as illustrations by Paul Hanley.
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
The Knocking in the Mineshaft | Simon Bucher-Jones | |
House of Images | Philip Purser-Hallard | Depicts the TARDIS as a "cabinet" of light. |
The Cross of Venus | Andrew Hickey | |
Gauntlet of Absolution | Kara Dennison | |
Past Lives | Lance Parkin | Revisits the Douglas Camfield Doctor from Parkin's novel Cold Fusion. |
Valhalla Must Fall! | Aditya Bidikar | |
The Other Side | Jay Eales | |
Doctor Crocus and the Pages of Fear | Paul Driscoll |
Forgotten Lives II[]
Title | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|
The Island of Aeons | James Bojaciuk | |
Retrogenesis | Philip Purser-Hallard | |
The Hand of Night and Shadow | Simon Bucher-Jones | |
The Hounds of War | Kenton Hall | |
The Rosewell Incident | Matthew Kresal | |
The First Englishmen | Daniel Tessier | |
Swan Song | Andrew Hickey | |
The Demons of Dog Street | Kara Dennison | |
The Hive Minders | Ian McIntire | |
Leverage | Gareth Madgwick | |
Trail of a Time Lord | Lance Parkin | |
In the Land Beyond the River | Aditya Bidikar | |
Scene to Uncover | Cody Schell | |
Borrowed Time | Jay Eales | |
Doctor Crocus and the Factory of the Future | Nicole Petit | |
The Queen of Bohemia and the Laughing TARDIS | Paul Driscoll |
Master Works[]
Master Works was published in 2020, and edited by Elizabeth A. Allen. It was an anthology focusing on the Doctor's companions and the Master. It benefited Migrant Justice.
Light in the Dark[]
Light in the Dark: an Eight Doctor Charity Zine was published in 2020 and edited by Billie Tenhage. All profits went to the Walton Center NHS.
Regenerations[]
Regenerations was published in August 2020 by Chinbeard Books, and edited by Kenton Hall. It was an anthology surrounding the War Doctor, and was based on a concept originating from the Seasons of War charity anthology. All profits went to Invest in ME.
Bafflement and Devotion[]
- Main article: Bafflement & Devotion: Iris at the Edges (anthology)
Bafflement & Devotion: Iris at the Edges was a 2021 Obverse Books Iris Wildthyme anthology benefiting the Project Muyembe charity. Each story featured licensed use of Iris Wildthyme.
Gender Who?[]
Released on 17 February 2021, Gender Who? was an anthology celebrating trans, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming characters and themes; the anthology contained short stories, essays, and artwork, with the proceeds going to the Pride Center of Vermont.
Sarah Jane Smith: Roving Reporter[]
Released on 17 March 2021, proceeds from Sarah Jane Smith: Roving Reporter went to British Columbia Cancer Foundation. The anthology had contributions from Paul Magrs, Simon Bucher-Jones, and Russell McGee, among others.
Painting It Black[]
Released on 14 April 2021, Painting It Black was an anthology celebrating the Black characters of Doctor Who. All proceeds were split between the House of GG and Black Lives Matter.
Thirteen Fanzine[]
Thirteen: An Unofficial Doctor Who Fanzine was a fanzine focused on the Thirteenth Doctor era. Three volumes were released between 2019 and April 2022, with all proceeds going to Unicef.
Terraqueous Distributors[]
- Main article: Terraqueous Distributors
Audio[]
- The Nightmare Fair (April 2003, produced by Argolis, benefiting Sense)
- The Final Game (Summer 2018-Summer 2020, produced by Black Glove Studio/Studio Severn)
Cover gallery[]
Anthologies[]
Novels[]
Professor Howe[]
The Professor Howe series of books were each parodies of specific Doctor Who episodes. All proceeds raised for the sale of the books went to Children in Need.
Novelisations[]
Licensed spin-offs[]
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, and Savalia and Kendo, respectively.
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.