LETHBRIDGE-STEWART RETURNS
Every legend has a beginning, and for Colonel Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart it was in the London Underground.
Candy Jar Books is very proud to present Lethbridge-Stewart, a new series of novels revealing the untold
story of Colonel Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart set shortly after the 1968 serial,
The Web of Fear, fully licensed by
the Executor of the Haisman Literary Estate, Mervyn Haisman’s granddaughter
Hannah Haisman, and endorsed by Henry Lincoln.
The
first series consists of:
- The Forgotten Son by Andy Frankham-Allen
- Horror of Det-Sen by Lance Parkin
- The Schizoid Earth by David A McIntee
- Mutually Assured Domination by Nick Walters.
Brigadier
Sir Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart has been an essential element of Doctor Who since 1968. He was created by
authors Mervyn Haisman & Henry Lincoln for the six-part Doctor Who serial, The Web of Fear. A one-off character. Until over a year later when
he was brought back to Doctor Who,
promoted to Brigadier and the head of UNIT. Forty-six years on and the
Brigadier has become one of the most iconic characters in Doctor Who, having appeared with ten different Doctors in countless
TV episodes, books, audio dramas and comic strips! The character’s death was
acknowledged in the 2012 Doctor Who
series starring Matt Smith, and was resurrected briefly in the 2014 series
finale starring Peter Capaldi. On TV the character’s story is over, but there
is so much more to tell.
Andy
Frankham-Allen has been a Doctor Who
fan since his childhood and serves as line editor for the series, as well as
penning the opening novel. Andy is the former line editor of Untreed Reads
Publishing’s series Space: 1889 &
Beyond, and has penned several Doctor
Who Short Trip stories for Big
Finish and Candy Jar’s very own celebration of Doctor Who, Companions: Fifty Years of Doctor Who Assistants. He
said: “It's an insane privilege and responsibility to put
this series together, to reveal the real story behind such a legend of Doctor Who.”
Lance
Parkin has written over twenty books and audio dramas for Doctor Who since 1996, including the 35th Anniversary
novel, The Infinity Doctors, and the
2008 Tenth Doctor novel, The Eyeless.
He also worked on British soap Emmerdale
and wrote Magic Words, the definitive
biography of Alan Moore. Lance
said: “Lethbridge-Stewart was always a steady presence in
the Doctor's life. Even in The Web of Fear, he instinctively trusted the Doctor
from almost the moment he met him. I wrote for the character in The Dying Days,
and that was the version of the Brigadier we all think of now, I think, an old
soldier, semi-retired, seen it all. It's been interesting writing for a
younger, hungrier Lethbridge-Stewart – not even a Brigadier at this point in
his life. It's also been nice writing a story that's set in the aftermath of
The Web of Fear, with Lethbridge-Stewart only just starting to realise that the
Earth's facing a whole new type of enemy."
David A McIntee has written novels for Star Trek, Final Destination and Space: 1999 and over fifteen books and
audio dramas for Doctor Who since 1993,
including the Brigadier-centric novel, The
Face of the Enemy. David said: “To be honest it (the series) is something I'm amazed hasn't been done
before – it’s just such a natural and obvious thing. The form it's taking is
also cool because it has the flexibility to move between styles and genres –
thriller, SF, horror, etc – while maintaining a definite identity. As for
the Brig himself, he's one of those characters where the casting was so perfect
that it just made the character so memorable, and who (usually) feels so
right.”
Nick
Walters has written five novels for Doctor
Who since 1998. Nick said: “After the Doctor himself the Brigadier is the
best-loved character in Doctor Who. I met Nick Courtney a number of times and
he really is a splendid fellow. He brought a real humanity and vulnerability to
the role without compromising the essential toughness of the character.
Brigadier Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart is the chap you'd want on your
side in a fight – any fight – and it is a real privilege to be exploring what
made him into the character we came to know and love.”
Simon Williams, the man behind the cover art, is a
former artist for Marvel UK having drawn for The Transformers, The Hulk, Spider-Man and Death’s Head. Simon said: “I’ve always been a big fan of Doctor Who
and the Brigadier and having the opportunity to draw this iconic character is a
huge privilege.”
Hannah Haisman said: “This project has been a
long-time coming. I had to be certain that I was entrusting my grandfather’s
legacy to a publisher and authors who would respect what he created. Candy Jar
and Andy have assembled a team that are sympathetic to the Brigadier, and these
are very exciting times that we can all be proud of.”
Lethbridge-Stewart will be launched on 22nd February 2015, the
fourth anniversary of Nicholas Courtney’s death, the actor behind the Brigadier.
The first series of novels will be released one book per quarter throughout
2015.
The Forgotten Son is available for pre-order from the Candy Jar Book store, where you can pre-order all four titles in the Four-Book-Bundle for a special discounted price. By pre-ordering directly from Candy Jar you ensure you'll get your copy of each title a couple of weeks before official publication.
What an absolutely fabulous idea. Rest assured I shall be pre-ordering these books and look forward to reading them throughout the year. Candy Jar - Splendid chaps all of you!
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