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Eighth and Doctor
By the time of the Eighth Doctor audio play Terror Firma ( set after Remembrance ), Davros is commanding a Dalek army which has successfully conquered the Earth.
Terror Firma seemed to contradict the events of the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel War of the Daleks by John Peel, in which an unmerged Davros is placed on trial by the Dalek Prime, a combination of the Dalek Emperor and the Dalek Supreme.
* War of the Daleks by John Peel ( Eighth Doctor Adventures )
The Doctor was loomed in the House of Lungbarrow in the mountains of South Gallifrey, but unique among the house's cousins he has a belly button ( Lungbarrow suggests this is because he is a re-incarnation of The Other, but later BBC books featuring the Eighth Doctor suggest he actually has a Gallifreyan father and human mother as stated in the 1996 telemovie ).
It's also briefly implied in Vampire Science, that the Eighth Doctor is Life's champion, implying the existence of another unseen figure.
In the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Ancestor Cell by Peter Anghelides and Stephen Cole, Gallifrey is destroyed as a result of the Eighth Doctor's desire to prevent the voodoo cult Faction Paradox from starting a war between the Time Lords and an unnamed Enemy.
In the last regular Eighth Doctor novel, The Gallifrey Chronicles by Lance Parkin, it is revealed that while Gallifrey was destroyed, the Time Lords were not erased from history.
Despite Davies ' unequivocal statement that the two wars are distinct, Lance Parkin, in his Doctor Who chronology AHistory, suggests in a speculative essay that the two destructions of Gallifrey may be the same event seen from two different perspectives, with the Eighth Doctor present twice ( and both times culpable for the planet's destruction ).
* In Sword of Orion, the Eighth Doctor reveals that his sonic screwdriver has a torch built into the handle.
* In the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel Alien Bodies, the Time Lord Homunculette has a sonic monkey wrench.
According to the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Gallifrey Chronicles by Lance Parkin, it previously belonged to a Time Lord named Marnal, who was, like the Doctor, something of a renegade.
The circuit was called a " cloaking device " by the Eighth Doctor in the Doctor Who television movie, and again a " chameleon circuit " in the 2005 series episode " Boom Town ".
In " Boom Town " ( 2005 ), the Ninth Doctor implied that he had stopped trying to fix the circuit quite some time ago because he had become rather fond of the police box shape – a claim the Eighth Doctor made in the 1996 television movie.
In the 1996 television movie, the Eighth Doctor revealed that he hid a secret key in a cubbyhole above the ' P ' in the ' POLICE BOX ' sign.
In the 1996 television movie, the Eighth Doctor ( and the Seventh before him ) kept a spare key " in a cubbyhole behind the ' P '" ( of the POLICE BOX sign ).
Shada, which never aired due to a production strike terminating its filming, was later released on VHS with Tom Baker narrating the unfilmed segments, and later completed as a webcast with Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor and John Leeson as K9.
With the approval of his widow, Ingeborg, his voice was utilised as part of the plot of the Big Finish Productions ' 40th Anniversary Doctor Who audio drama, Zagreus, appearing as messages from the Doctor's TARDIS as it attempted to help the currently corrupted Eighth Doctor ( voiced by Paul McGann ).

Eighth and Adventures
* The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the Eighth Dimension
In the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel " The Ancestor Cell " by Peter Anghelides and Stephen Cole, the Time Lords are shown to house other weapons of mass destruction in a stable time eddy known as the Slaughterhouse.
* Miranda ( Doctor Who ), a character in the British novel series Eighth Doctor Adventures
; Eighth Doctor Adventures
In the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel War of the Daleks by John Peel it is revealed that Skaro had not in fact been destroyed by the Seventh Doctor's actions.
* Doctor Who: The Eighth Doctor Adventures ( Sci-fi Drama )
* Eighth Doctor Adventures, a series of novels based on the television series Doctor Who
* Burgess, Maclean and Philby appear in the Doctor Who Eighth Doctor Adventures novel Endgame dealing with their defection to Russia.
Terrance Dicks's Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Eight Doctors suggests that the Ravolox affair from the television serial The Trial of a Time Lord: The Mysterious Planet was the work of the CIA.
Sam Jones, a companion from the Eighth Doctor Adventures spin-off novels, also attended Coal Hill School.
* The Eighth Doctor Adventures novel, War of the Daleks by John Peel, claimed that Skaro had not been destroyed after all ; having discovered records of Skaro's destruction during their invasion of Earth, the Daleks moved Davros to another planet while he was in stasis after terraforming it to resemble Skaro, thus allowing the destruction of ' Skaro ' to take place on their terms.
They also appear in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel War of the Daleks by John Peel, which depicts them having become a warlike society willing to destroy an inhabited planet simply as part of a trap to defeat a Dalek attack fleet-although the Doctor's disgust at their actions lends some hope that they will begin to reconsider their stance -, and the Big Finish Productions audio plays The Mutant Phase, where their attempt to use a biological weapon against the Daleks nearly creates a monstrous insectoid race, and Brotherhood of the Daleks, where the Sixth Doctor discovers a Thal project to brainwash Daleks to act as ' sleeper agents ', only for the plan to fail when the Daleks ' true natures assert themselves.
The First Doctor's appearance in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Eight Doctors, also by Dicks, occurs during this story.
An unspecified incarnation of the Doctor ( but fitting the description of the Eighth ) brokered a peace between the Sontarans and the Rutans in the Lance Parkin Past Doctor Adventures novel The Infinity Doctors.
* The Second Doctor's appearance in Terrance Dicks ' BBC Books Eighth Doctor Adventures novel, The Eight Doctors, occurs during this story.
The family / organization were originally featured as recurring antagonists in the BBC Doctor Who Eighth Doctor Adventures novels, but have since featured in their own continuing tales.
Originally a subplot in the Eighth Doctor Adventures, the War features characters and concepts evolved from the original Doctor Who set-up, in several cases with names changed or obscured for reasons literary ( most of the groups or items mentioned are described in rather different terms with a different emphasis on certain aspects ) and legal ( the Faction and The Enemy are Miles's creations, but other elements are not — thus the Great Houses are the new series ' equivalent to Doctor Whos Time Lords ).
Faction Paradox debuted and appeared repeatedly in the Eighth Doctor Adventures, a series of Doctor Who novels published by BBC Books featuring the Eighth Doctor ( as portrayed by Paul McGann on television and in audio dramas ).

Eighth and novel
He won three Pulitzer Prizes — for the novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey and for the two plays Our Town and The Skin of Our Teeth — and a U. S. National Book Award for the novel The Eighth Day.
In 1968 he won the National Book Award for his novel The Eighth Day.
There he started his longest novel, The Eighth Day, which went on to win the National Book Award.
He started his longest novel, The Eighth Day while living in Douglas.
The Futurological Congress () is a 1971 black humour science fiction novel by Stanisław Lem detailing the exploits of the hero of a number of his books, Ijon Tichy, as he visits the Eighth World Futurological Congress at a Hilton Hotel in Costa Rica.
It has nonetheless had a significant impact on the Doctor Who mythos, with an ongoing Doctor Who novel line, comic strip, and audio series that featured the Eighth Doctor for years, until and beyond the TV series ' return in 2005.
The Eighth Doctor encountered the Zygons in the spin-off novel The Bodysnatchers by Mark Morris, which also named the now-destroyed Zygon homeworld as Zygor.
* The Sixth Doctor sequence in the novel The Eight Doctors-where the Eighth Doctor visits and assists his past selves-takes place at the beginning of this episode, the Eighth Doctor interacting with a version of the Sixth Doctor created by the Valeyard's attempt to ' force ' a timeline where the Sixth Doctor will be executed, the two Doctors subsequently working together to set up an inquiry into the High Council's attempt to put the Sixth Doctor on trial to cover up their failures.

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