Dalek I Loved You

Dalek I Loved You

by NickGriffiths (Author)

Synopsis

Nick Griffiths watched his first Doctor Who aged four and a bit. He would have hidden behind the sofa but it was back against the wall and his parents didn't let him move furniture so he hid behind a cushion instead. He's since been told by his mum and dad that they didn't have a sofa only armchairs. So this book should really be called Behind the Armchair, but that didn't sound right. And so began a life long obsession. When Doctor Who started getting rubbish (after Tom Baker basically) he nearly escaped into the world of music and girls until he discovered someone selling tapes of old episodes in the small ads and that was that again. Only in the last few years has an anti-social obsession become something he can earn a living from as a journalist and happily this coincided with Doctor Who getting good again. Plus he has a son now so he can claim he's watching it for him. Oh and his son's called Dylan not Gallifray or Davros.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Publisher: Gollancz
Published: 19 Apr 2007

ISBN 10: 0575079401
ISBN 13: 9780575079403
Book Overview: Dr Who has become a pop culture smash for a whole new generation More than 8 million people regularly tune in for each episode A fixture on British television since 1962 Nick Griffiths has interviewed every living Doctor Who He reviews TV for the Daily Mail He is the resident Doctor Who expert for the Radio Times He owns an inflatable dalek. He was once nearly cool, writing for NME and Sounds Despite all this as many as three women have slept with him

Media Reviews
An unadulterated nostalgia-fest written with fun, wit and love. I'm a number of years younger than Griffiths and of a different sex, but I've rarely read anything that so reflects my own opinions and feelings about the series and more besides. If friends, parents and partners don't quite comprehend a fan's love for the Doctor, this is the book that might help them get there. DR WHO MAGAZINE He conjures up just how mind-blowing it was for an ordinary suburban kid to be transported to a realm of danger and rampant sci-fi imaginings. -- James Lovegrove FINANCIAL TIMES If I am getting carried away, it is the fault of Griffiths's awfully charming memoir of boyhood and Doctor Who, with its deft evocations of eight-year-old invincibility and embarrassing school discos as well as arguments about Cybermen vs Autons or Jon Pertwee vs Tom Baker. Griffiths's chatty, self-deprecating style is disarming... THE GUARDIAN Popbitch's favourite new memoir. POPBITCH ... he writes with such wit and warmth, and a strong line in observational humour. THE DAILY MAIL A funny and warm confessional, with the message of hope that you can be a functioning Doctor Who fan and still manage to find a partner and a life - and a renewed interest in toy Daleks. WATERSTONES BOOKS QUARTERLY Dalek I loved You is a gentle and delicious dip into the past. A piece of personal time travel that is well worth the trip. -- John Berlyne SF REV.COM A fascinating take. Surprisingly this work, though seemingly trivial, is maturely written and will probably be appreciated by future social historians. Of interest to the SF fan, it also successfully captures the sense of fun the genre evokes. Easy to read and very entertaining, this book is a delight. CONCATENATION.ORG ... the book Nick Hornby would have written if he'd spent his life obsessing over Doctor Who rather than footie. Nostalgic and funny. THE MAIL ON SUNDAY
Author Bio
Nick Griffiths is 40 and maintains that he registers only a 2 or 3 on the Nerd Register (where as most REAL Doctor Who fans hit 7 or 8 easily). He is married and has son called Dylan. He's 10 and says he likes Doctor Who to keep his dad happy. Nick writes TV reviews for the Daily Mail and articles for the Radio Times. He wonders where his career as a cutting edge music writer went.