Peter Anghelides
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Peter Anghelides /ˌændʒɪˈliːdɪs/ is an English author and dramatist best known for his work on various spin-offs related to the BBC television series Doctor Who.
Work[edit]
Anghelides' first published work was the short story "Moving On" (1996) in the third volume of the Virgin Decalog collections, which led to further short stories in the fourth collection and then in two of the BBC Short Trips collections that followed. In January 1998, his first novel Kursaal was published as part of BBC Books' Eighth Doctor Adventures series of books. Anghelides subsequently wrote two more novels for the range, Frontier Worlds in November 1999, which was named "Best Eighth Doctor Novel" in the annual Doctor Who Magazine poll of its readers, and the The Ancestor Cell in July 2000 (co-written with departing editor Stephen Cole). The Ancestor Cell was placed ninth in the Top 10 of SFX magazine's "Best SF/Fantasy novelisation or TV tie-in novel" category of that year.
Anghelides also wrote several short stories for a variety of Big Finish Productions' Short Trips and Bernice Summerfield collections. This led, in November 2002, to the production of his first audio adventure for Big Finish, the play Sarah Jane Smith: Mirror, Signal, Manoeuvre.[1] He has since written audioplays based on Torchwood and Blake's 7.
In 2008, he wrote a comic which featured on the Doctor Who website.[2]
Bibliography[edit]
Novels[edit]
- Doctor Who: Kursaal, 1998
- Doctor Who: Frontier Worlds, 1999
- Doctor Who: The Ancestor Cell, 2000 (with Stephen Cole)
- Torchwood: Another Life, 2007
- Torchwood: Pack Animals, 2008
Audiobooks[edit]
- Doctor Who: Pest Control (2008), read by David Tennant.[3]
Audio plays[edit]
- Sarah Jane Smith: Mirror, Signal, Manoeuvre (2002)
- Doctor Who: The Chaos Pool (2009)
- Doctor Who: The Four Doctors (2010)
- Doctor Who: The Companion Chronicles - Ferril's Folly (2011)
References[edit]
- ↑ "Interview: Peter Anghelides". BBC. 1 January 2004. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
- ↑ "The Baktek Illusion". Peter Anghelides. 2008.[dead link]
- ↑ "Tennant to read 'Who' audio adventure". digital spy. 22 February 2008. Retrieved 13 July 2011.
External links[edit]
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