Gary Leigh wrote: > One point about the books, they left you feeling unsatisfied. It made you > really realize how much the acting added to the show. It turned it from an > entertaining comedy to an all time classic. I'll take your word on this. If so, the novels are probably a lot like the old novelizations of Dr. Who stories which often suffered from the same disease. Alas, that was the only way to catch up on stories you hadn't seen before the BBC decided it could make a few bucks selling the episodes on video. I've heard some discussion here of fan fiction being written, but it doesn't seem to be that big a deal from what little it is mentioned here. That's not how it is in Dr. Who-land, where the series has spawned a successful line of original novels. Does anyone in the thick of things PGwise have any knowledge that would be useful on this subject? Kevin, who wisely declines comment on the subject of dreams. -- T H E P R E S S G A N G M A I L I N G L I S T By default, pressing 'reply' will send mail back to the list, not to the author of the message you're replying to. To unsubscribe, mail "unsubscribe" to "pressgang-request@lists.yoyo.org" |