Yesterday evening was very exciting for me. After a long
time waiting for everything to be sorted and settled and ready and it to be
appropriate for it to be made public, my publishers (and it feels exciting
itself just to be able to say that!) Ten Acre officially announced my new book! It’s called Pull to Open, it tells the story of the creation of Doctor
Who in 1963, and it will be released on the 24th of July.
I wrote the book through 2022, and Stuart at Ten Acre was
gratifyingly very keen to take it when I sent it to him at the end of the year.
It’s taken a while having to wait for certain bits and pieces to fall into place
and doing some edits and other admin, but finally we’re almost there and the time
was right to announce.
But why, some people may ask, go back to 1963 again? Why
go back to tell a story which has been told before? When even in the introduction
to The Long Game I mentioned how although the creation of Doctor Who
was a story which had long fascinated me, it was one which had already been
well-told by others.
So why have my go at telling it now?
Well, I gradually came to realise that although that was
true, it had never been told in quite the way I fancied telling it.
“I can’t imagine ever writing another non-fiction book,
either Doctor Who or otherwise,” I
told him. “But you never know! If I am struck by a good idea for one I might
give it a go. Certainly in Doctor Who terms, I think
pretty much anything else I might want to write about has already been very
well researched and written about by other people. Whereas with The Long Game I knew I had
something new and a bit different which hadn’t formed the basis of a book
before. If I ever think of something else like that, I might have another try!”
And that kept nagging at me, once the interview came out.
It felt like a waste, somehow. All that good will I had built up with The
Long Game, there had to be some way I could channel it into something else.
Frankly, I knew that if I put my efforts in 2022 into trying to write fiction
there was very little chance of it being published. If I put them into writing
a non-fiction work, specifically a television history of particularly Doctor
Who one, I knew that it would be at least seriously considered and probably
had a very good chance of being published.
Doctor Who: The Sixties, a Christmas present I received in 1993 which helped start me off on this journey. |
After The Long Game had come out in the autumn of 2021,
it became clear that I could, in fact, write something other people would
want to read, and I had done a pretty good job of it. Lots of people
bought it. Lots of people said very nice things about it. At the very end of
the year, in one of the interviews I did to promote the book, with AJ Black for his website, he asked me if I had any other books lined up.
But secondly, I knew from the kind comments I’d had that
one of the things people had really enjoyed about The Long Game was the
way in which it provided the wider background and context of what was going on
in the BBC at the time. Who these people were who had taken these decisions,
and how they’d come to be in those jobs at that time. Not just what had
happened and when, but why it had happened. How the BBC and the wider
British television industry was working at that point in history.
I knew that if I could bring all of that, and combine it
with the strong narrative thread of the events slowly coalescing for Doctor
Who to rise into existence, I could write a really strong book. With 2023
being the show’s 60th anniversary year, it seemed perfect. So, hopefully,
that’s what I’ve done. On the 16th of January 2022, I sat down at my
laptop and typed the opening words: “When did Doctor Who begin?” There’s
been a lot of writing, research and effort since then, but now, 130,000 words
later, I have a book.
Among all the many, many lovely comments I’ve had since Pull to Open was announced by Ten Acre yesterday evening, one of the ones by which I was most touched was from a user called DeeDeeTee on the GallifreyBase Doctor Who forum. They wrote that: “The Long Game was an incredible read. Paul's skill is managing to tell the history of the BBC through the history of the show. I'm really looking forward to seeing how he weaves this magic in telling the story about the very beginning...”
It’s a wonderful feeling to find that someone you don’t know at all has read something you have written and understood exactly what you were trying to do with it. Trying to explore and explain part of the deep, rich and complex history of the BBC through the narrative of how that history influenced the development of Doctor Who.
Whether or not I have succeeded… Well, time will tell. We’ll see what people make of it next month.
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