A review by nwhyte
Doctor Who and the Zarbi by Bill Strutton

http://nhw.livejournal.com/1022168.ht...[return]Doctor Who and the Zarbi was based on the story now generally called The Web Planet, which crashes and burns spectacularly awfully on screen because today's viewers cannot take the production values seriously. The book is a bit better, because the printed page and the reader's imagination, rather than the unforgiving camera, supplies the details of the various non-human races in conflict on the planet Vortis. In principle it makes a good sf story, perhaps the best sf story, in terms of the norms of the genre, from the whole Hartnell era.[return][return]The book does suffer from a couple of weaknesses. Most bizarrely, and uniquely, the central character is referred to as 'Doctor Who' rather than 'the Doctor' throughout, and the Tardis loses the definite article, as if Tardis was just the name of the vessel. Also, in places the book feels uncomfortably like what it is, a TV script cast in different format, and one feels that Strutton is just writing what appeared to the viewer on the screen. Having said that, though, the book is still better than the original TV story.