JOHN PEEL (WRITER)
'John Peel' (born 1954) is a British writer, best known for his books connected to several television series. He has written under several pseudonyms, including ''John Vincent'' and ''Nicholas Adams''. He lives in Long Island, New York and his wife is a U.S. citizen, but Peel still travels under a British passport.
In the 1980s he wrote an officially-sanctioned spin-off novel from the popular 1960s television series ''The Avengers'', entitled ''Too Many Targets''. He is also known for his various books connected to the BBC science-fiction series ''Doctor Who''. He has also written novels based upon ''Star Trek'' making him possibly the only author to have written officially licensed continuation novels based upon both the ''Doctor Who'' and ''Star Trek'' franchises.
A friend of the writer Terry Nation, he wrote novelisations of several ''Doctor Who'' stories featuring Nation's Daleks for Target Books, reportedly one of the few writers willing to do so due to the large percentage of the author's fee Nation's agents demanded for the rights to use the Daleks. For similar reasons, Peel is one of the few novelists to have used the Daleks in full-length original ''Doctor Who'' novels, writing ''War of the Daleks'' and ''Legacy of the Daleks'' in the Eighth Doctor Adventures range for BBC Books in 1997 and 1998 respectively. Neither novel was particularly well-received by fans of the series, due in part to Peel's rewriting of Dalek history as had been seen on screen in the television series (in particular the destruction of Skaro in ''Remembrance of the Daleks''), to bring their story more in line with Nation's wishes than with how television writers subsequent to Nation had depicted them.
Peel was in fact the first writer ever to have penned a full-length ''Doctor Who'' novel featuring the Doctor not to be based upon a televised or radio script, '', when he was chosen by range editor Peter Darvill-Evans to launch the ''New Adventures'' range, carrying on from where the then-cancelled television series had left off, in 1991. He later wrote the novel ''Evolution'' for their sister range, the ''Missing Adventures'' (set during the programme's run with previous Doctors and companions), and also ''The Gallifrey Chronicles'' (not to be confused with the final book in Eighth Doctor Adventures series), a compendium detailing the history of the Doctor's home planet.
Peel has also written several original novels based upon ''Star Trek'', and under the pseudonym "John Vincent" wrote a series of novels based upon the TV series ''James Bond Jr.''.
★ ''Are You Afraid of the Dark?'': The Tale of the Restless House
★ ''The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo'': Hot Rock
★ ''The Secret World of Alex Mack'': I Spy, Lost in Vegas
★ The Secret of Dragon Home
★ Maniac
★ Shockers: Night Wings
★ Horrorscope-Pen name Nicholas Adams
===Diadem (series)===
The first six books in this series were originally published by Apple (Scholastic). After the cancellation of the series by Apple (Scholastic), books 1-6 were reprinted by Llewellyn Publications in 2004-2005 and books 7 onwards were published directly by Llewllyn.
# Book of Names (August 1997. Paperback ISBN 0-590-05947-5, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0617-5)
# Book of Signs (August 1997. Paperback ISBN 0-590-05948-3, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0616-7)
# Book of Magic (August 1997. Paperback ISBN 0-590-05949-1, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0615-9)
# Book of Thunder (Hardback ISBN 0-590-05950-5, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0614-0)
# Book of Earth (February 1998. Paperback ISBN 0-590-14965-2, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0613-2)
# Book of Nightmares (April 1998. Paperback ISBN 0-590-14966-0, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0612-4)
# Book of War (May 2005. ISBN 0-7387-0611-6)
# Book of Oceans (September 2005, ISBN 0-7387-0748-1)
# Book of Reality (February 2006. ISBN 0-7387-0843-7)
# Book of Doom (June 2006, ISBN 0-7387-0842-9)
# Doomsday (September 1999, ISBN 0-439-06030-3)
# Betrayal (November 1999, ISBN 0-439-06031-1)
# Traitor (January 2000, ISBN 0-439-06032-X)
# Revolution (March 2000, ISBN 0-439-06033-8)
# Meltdown (May 2000, ISBN 0-439-06034-6)
# Firestorm (July 2000, ISBN 0-439-06035-4)
★ Author's official website
★ Biography of John Peel at On Target
★ Diadem fansite
| Contents |
| Books connected to TV series |
| Other works |
| 2099 series |
| External links |
Books connected to TV series
In the 1980s he wrote an officially-sanctioned spin-off novel from the popular 1960s television series ''The Avengers'', entitled ''Too Many Targets''. He is also known for his various books connected to the BBC science-fiction series ''Doctor Who''. He has also written novels based upon ''Star Trek'' making him possibly the only author to have written officially licensed continuation novels based upon both the ''Doctor Who'' and ''Star Trek'' franchises.
A friend of the writer Terry Nation, he wrote novelisations of several ''Doctor Who'' stories featuring Nation's Daleks for Target Books, reportedly one of the few writers willing to do so due to the large percentage of the author's fee Nation's agents demanded for the rights to use the Daleks. For similar reasons, Peel is one of the few novelists to have used the Daleks in full-length original ''Doctor Who'' novels, writing ''War of the Daleks'' and ''Legacy of the Daleks'' in the Eighth Doctor Adventures range for BBC Books in 1997 and 1998 respectively. Neither novel was particularly well-received by fans of the series, due in part to Peel's rewriting of Dalek history as had been seen on screen in the television series (in particular the destruction of Skaro in ''Remembrance of the Daleks''), to bring their story more in line with Nation's wishes than with how television writers subsequent to Nation had depicted them.
Peel was in fact the first writer ever to have penned a full-length ''Doctor Who'' novel featuring the Doctor not to be based upon a televised or radio script, '', when he was chosen by range editor Peter Darvill-Evans to launch the ''New Adventures'' range, carrying on from where the then-cancelled television series had left off, in 1991. He later wrote the novel ''Evolution'' for their sister range, the ''Missing Adventures'' (set during the programme's run with previous Doctors and companions), and also ''The Gallifrey Chronicles'' (not to be confused with the final book in Eighth Doctor Adventures series), a compendium detailing the history of the Doctor's home planet.
Peel has also written several original novels based upon ''Star Trek'', and under the pseudonym "John Vincent" wrote a series of novels based upon the TV series ''James Bond Jr.''.
Other works
★ ''Are You Afraid of the Dark?'': The Tale of the Restless House
★ ''The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo'': Hot Rock
★ ''The Secret World of Alex Mack'': I Spy, Lost in Vegas
★ The Secret of Dragon Home
★ Maniac
★ Shockers: Night Wings
★ Horrorscope-Pen name Nicholas Adams
===Diadem (series)===
The first six books in this series were originally published by Apple (Scholastic). After the cancellation of the series by Apple (Scholastic), books 1-6 were reprinted by Llewellyn Publications in 2004-2005 and books 7 onwards were published directly by Llewllyn.
# Book of Names (August 1997. Paperback ISBN 0-590-05947-5, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0617-5)
# Book of Signs (August 1997. Paperback ISBN 0-590-05948-3, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0616-7)
# Book of Magic (August 1997. Paperback ISBN 0-590-05949-1, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0615-9)
# Book of Thunder (Hardback ISBN 0-590-05950-5, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0614-0)
# Book of Earth (February 1998. Paperback ISBN 0-590-14965-2, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0613-2)
# Book of Nightmares (April 1998. Paperback ISBN 0-590-14966-0, Reprint ISBN 0-7387-0612-4)
# Book of War (May 2005. ISBN 0-7387-0611-6)
# Book of Oceans (September 2005, ISBN 0-7387-0748-1)
# Book of Reality (February 2006. ISBN 0-7387-0843-7)
# Book of Doom (June 2006, ISBN 0-7387-0842-9)
2099 series
# Doomsday (September 1999, ISBN 0-439-06030-3)
# Betrayal (November 1999, ISBN 0-439-06031-1)
# Traitor (January 2000, ISBN 0-439-06032-X)
# Revolution (March 2000, ISBN 0-439-06033-8)
# Meltdown (May 2000, ISBN 0-439-06034-6)
# Firestorm (July 2000, ISBN 0-439-06035-4)
External links
★ Author's official website
★ Biography of John Peel at On Target
★ Diadem fansite
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