Difference between revisions of "On Target"
From The Doctor Who Cuttings Archive
Jump to navigationJump to searchJohn Lavalie (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{article | publication = Best of British | file = https://cuttingsarchive.org/images/7/76/2023-11_Best_of_British_p56-57.pdf | px = | height = | width = | date = 2023-11-...") |
John Lavalie (talk | contribs) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
| type = | | type = | ||
| description = | | description = | ||
− | | categories = | + | | categories = books |
| moreTitles = | | moreTitles = | ||
| morePublications = | | morePublications = | ||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
Russell Cook browses through 50 years of a publishing phenomenon | Russell Cook browses through 50 years of a publishing phenomenon | ||
− | Knight, Piccolo, Puffin, Armada, Corgi. All nouns | + | Knight, Piccolo, Puffin, Armada, Corgi. All nouns in their own right, they are also the names given to various children's book publishing imprints of the 1960s and 70s. See one of these logos today on the spine of a book and you are most likely to be in a secondhand bookshop or browsing the wares of a Sunday morning car-boot sale. |
The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, Biggles, Jennings, and the Just William stories are all under the banner of those iconic publishing emblems. However, there is one imprint that is often forgotten and overlooked — step forward the Target Books brand. It was created in 1973 by Universal-Tandem Publishing with the intention of producing a wide and varied children's selection of titles, both fiction and non-fiction, to be published in paperback. | The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, Biggles, Jennings, and the Just William stories are all under the banner of those iconic publishing emblems. However, there is one imprint that is often forgotten and overlooked — step forward the Target Books brand. It was created in 1973 by Universal-Tandem Publishing with the intention of producing a wide and varied children's selection of titles, both fiction and non-fiction, to be published in paperback. | ||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
Published in the mid-1960s by the publisher Frederick Muller, they had achieved modest success in libraries and two of the three titles were issued in paperback. By the 1970s they were long out of print. | Published in the mid-1960s by the publisher Frederick Muller, they had achieved modest success in libraries and two of the three titles were issued in paperback. By the 1970s they were long out of print. | ||
− | In May 1973, paperback Target editions of [[broadwcast:Doctor Who and the Daleks|Doctor Who and the Daleks]], [[broadwcast:The Web Planet|the Zarbi]] and [[broadwcast:The | + | In May 1973, paperback Target editions of [[broadwcast:Doctor Who and the Daleks|Doctor Who and the Daleks]], [[broadwcast:The Web Planet|the Zarbi]] and [[broadwcast:The Crusade|the Crusaders]] made their way on to the bookshelves with new colourful psychedelic covers by Chris Achilleos. They sold like hot cakes and anyone who has enjoyed a hot cake often utters the phrase: "More please!" A publishing phenomenon was born. Very soon a deal was struck with the BBC through the Doctor Who production office. |
At the time Jon Pertwee was playing the Doctor and was at the height of his popularity, so the first two titles naturally were adaptations of his first two stories, though renamed as the Auton Invasion and the Cave Monsters as these were considered more exciting than their television counterparts [[broadwcast:Spearhead from Space|Spearhead from Space]] and [[broadwcast:Doctor Who and the Silurians|Doctor Who and the Silurians]]. | At the time Jon Pertwee was playing the Doctor and was at the height of his popularity, so the first two titles naturally were adaptations of his first two stories, though renamed as the Auton Invasion and the Cave Monsters as these were considered more exciting than their television counterparts [[broadwcast:Spearhead from Space|Spearhead from Space]] and [[broadwcast:Doctor Who and the Silurians|Doctor Who and the Silurians]]. |