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BBC and Books
Renwick integrated some of the plots and dialogue from the series into a novel, which was first published by BBC Books in 1992.
* In the 2007, Doctor Who novel Made of Steel ( ISBN 1846072042 ) written by Terrance Dicks, featuring the Tenth Doctor, published by BBC Books, the Cybermen have made the empty dome their base.
London: BBC Books, 2005.
This has been published by BBC Books since 2003 and is updated annually for the Christmas gift-giving season.
* Wood, Michael ( 2001, Revised Edition ) In Search of the Dark Ages, BBC Books, ISBN 978-0-563-53431-0
BBC Books published a novelisation of this serial on 15 March 2012, written by Gareth Roberts.
The scripts were edited and transformed into prose, and published by BBC Books in the form of diaries.
Beginning in the early 1970s he became a prolific illustrator for many anarchist, radical, alternative and mainstream publications, organisations, groups and individuals including Freedom Press, Undercurrents, Respect for Animals, BIT Newsletter, Arts Lab Newsletter, Idiot International, 1977 Firemans Strike, Libertarian Education, The Idler, Radical Community Medicine, Anarchy Magazine, Black Flag, Anarchy Comix, Common Ground, Industrial Worker, Aberlour Distillery, Country Life, Graphical Paper and Media Union, The Times Saturday Review, Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival, New Scientist, Oxford University Press, Penguin Books, Times Educational Supplement, London Anarchist Bookfair, Public and Commercial Services Union, The Sunday Times Magazine, Catholic Worker, Soil Association, The Bodleian Library, New Statesman, Cienfeugos Anarchist Review, Headline Books, The Financial Times, Resurgence, Scotland on Sunday, Town and Country Planning Association, Movement Against A Monarchy, Nursing Times, John Hegarty, The Listener, Zero, McCallan Whisky, Solidarity, New Society, News from Neasden, House & Garden, The Tablet, Radical Science Journal, Royal Mail, The Co-ops Fairs, Picador Books, Pluto Press, Working Press, Anarchismo, Insurrection, Our Generation, Ogilvy & Mather, Vogue, Radio Times, National Union of Teachers, Faber & Faber, Pimlico, Trades Union Congress, Transport and General Workers Union, Serpents Tale, Compendium Books, Poison Girls, Yale University Press, The Daily Telegraph, The Independent, Elephant Editions, Intelligent Life, Landworker, Zounds, Honey, New Musical Express, Knockabout Comics, Trickett and Webb, The Times, See Sharp Press, Countryside Commission, Industrial Common Ownership Movement, BBC Worldwide, Stop the War Coalition, The Folio Society, Unison, Anarchist Studies, Country Standard, Fitzrovia News, Anarchist Black Cross and many others.
BBC Books.
BBC Books, 2005.
Two were written by Jonathan Rice and published by BBC Books and the other one was written by Harold Snoad ( the director of Keeping Up Appearances ) and was published by Book Guild Publishing.
* Alistair Cooke's America ( 22 Nov 1973 ) BBC Books, London ISBN 0-563-12182-3 ; ( 13 Nov 2003 ) Phoenix ISBN 1-84188-229-1-updated edition with new introduction and final chapter written by Alistair Cooke
In the BBC Books novel The Eight Doctors by Terrance Dicks it is revealed that there were two Hands, both used by Omega.
* BBC Books
The Rani is mentioned in BBC Books ' Eighth Doctor Adventure The Ancestor Cell, by Peter Anghelides and Stephen Cole.
* Common Market Cookery: France ( BBC Books, 1973 ) ISBN 0-563-12586-1
* Common Market Cookery: Italy ( BBC Books, 1974 )
* Fist of Fun with Stewart Lee BBC Books, 1995.
* Fist of Fun ( with Richard Herring ; non-fiction ) BBC Books, 1995.
* Heritage ( Doctor Who ), a novel in the BBC Books series
Most recently, Christopher de Hamel, the Donnelly Fellow Librarian, appeared on the BBC Four series The Beauty of Books.
* Mosse, Kate, The House: Inside the Royal Opera House Covent Garden, BBC Books, London, 1995.

BBC and novel
On November 9, 2008, a radio adaptation of the novel was broadcast on BBC Radio 3, starring Robert Lonsdale as Paul Bäumer and Shannon Graney as Katczinsky.
BBC Radio 7 broadcast the six-part series, an abridged reading by Rufus Sewell of the original Doctor Syn novel, from January 4th 2010 to January 11th.
In 1959 Daphne Oram produced a novel method of synthesis, her " Oramics " technique, driven by drawings on a 35 mm film strip ; it was used for a number of years at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.
BBC Radio produced a one-off dramatisation of the novel in 1982 starring Michael Pennington.
In 2005, an adaptation of the novel was released on CD by the BBC Radio Collection to finally complete the run of Wimsey adaptations begun with Whose Body?
In the BBC television production of Graves ' novel, Piso and his wife, Plancina, were indeed at the root of the plot to poison Germanicus, with tacit consent from Tiberius ' mother, Livia, working through a local poisoner named Martina.
The BBC produced a feature-length television drama, All the King's Men ( not to be confused with the novel of the same name by Robert Penn Warren ), that focused attention on a unit ( the " Sandringham Company ") that was decimated at Gallipoli and included men from King George V's estate at Sandringham House.
Dobbs's novel was also dramatised for radio for BBC World Service in 1996, by Neville Teller, and had two television sequels ( To Play the King and The Final Cut ).
In the original series, which ran on Radio 4 from 1973 – 83, no adaptation was made of the seminal Gaudy Night, perhaps because the leading character in this novel is Harriet and not Peter ; this was corrected in 2005 when a version specially recorded for the BBC Radio Collection was released starring Carmichael and Joanna David.
Seven episodes were remade for BBC Radio 2 and the series also inspired a novel.
The BBC adapted novels such as The Day of the Triffids ( 1981 ), The Invisible Man ( 1984 ), The Nightmare Man ( 1981, from the novel Child of the Vodyanoi ) and The Tripods ( 1984 – 85 ), which however remained unfinished.
The most known examples of which being Aquila ( TV series ) ( 1997 – 1998 ) based on the novel by Andrew Norriss and Jeopardy ( BBC TV series ) ( 2002 – 2004 ) which won the 2002 BAFTA for Best Children's Drama.
The novel has been adapted by Robin Brooks for BBC Radio Four.
In the mystery novel Clouds of Witness by Dorothy L. Sayers and its series adaptation by BBC Television, Lord Peter Wimsey solves the case by reference to Manon Lescaut.
BBC Radio broadcast an adaptation of the novel by Stephen Wyatt in 2004 starring Emma Fielding as Becky, Stephen Fry as the Narrator, Katy Cavanaugh as Amelia, David Calder, Philip Fox, Jon Glover, Geoffrey Whitehead as Mr. Osbourne, Ian Marsters as Mr. Sedley, Alice Hart as Maria Osbourne and Margaret Tyzack as Miss Crawley ( subsequently re-broadcast on BBC Radio 7, renamed BBC Radio 4 Extra, in twenty fifteen-minute episodes ).
A 2010 television adaptation by Howard Overman for BBC Four borrowed some of the characters and some minor plot elements of the novel to create a new story.
A four part BBC radio adaptation of the novel was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in January 1998.
Hilton's novel was adapted for BBC Radio 4 in three hour-long episodes under its Classic Serial banner:
The BBC produced the two-hour radio dramatization of the novel, broadcasting it on BBC Radio 4 in November 1997.

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