Daniel O'Mahony
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Daniel O'Mahony is a half-British half-Irish author, most famous for his work for various spin-offs from the BBC television series Doctor Who.
[edit] Biography
As a young boy, O'Mahony would write his own stories based on Doctor Who, and pitched ideas to the BBC for episodes of the show. At the age of 12, he wrote to Nigel Robinson — the then editor of Target Books novelizations — demanding to be allowed to write the novelization of the television story "The Daleks' Master Plan". The request wasn't granted, although it did take several years for Target's successors, Virgin Publishing, to negotiate the rights to novelise the story.
Following the annmouncement of Virgin's intention to start publishing the New Adventures, O'Mahony submitted a number of proposals for novels, the third of which (Falls the Shadow) was accepted and published in November 1994. This was the only book that O'Mahony wrote for the New Adventures, however in July 1994 Virgin began publishing the Missing Adventures, and O'Mahony pitched a novel for this series and was accepted. The novel, The Man in the Velvet Mask was published in February 1996 and has gained a notorious reputation amongst Doctor Who fans, partly because of a glib simplification of what happens to one of the Doctor's companions, Dodo Chaplet.
O'Mahony did not write any novels for BBC Books' Past Doctor Adventures and Eighth Doctor Adventures ranges, however he did write two short stories for their "Short Trips" short story collections. One story, "Nothing at the End of the Lane" in Short Trips and Side Steps in March 2000 was particularly popular. ("Nothing at the End of the Lane" was originally the title of an unused idea for the first episode of Doctor Who and has also been used by a magazine about the recovery and restoration of archive Doctor Who episodes, unrelated to the "Short Trips" story.) When the licence to produce short fiction based on Doctor Who was acquired by Big Finish Productions, O'Mahony continued to write for their Short Trips series.
In 2002, O'Mahony was one of the writers who contributed to Mad Norwegian Press's fictional encyclopaedia The Book of the War, the first in their Faction Paradox series headed by Lawrence Miles.
In June 2003, O'Mahony wrote the novella The Cabinet of Light for Telos as part of their range of Doctor Who novellas. The novella was a great success, and created the characters of Honoré Lechasseur and Emily Blandish who went on to star in Telos' Time Hunter range of novellas, loosely connected to Doctor Who. O'Mahony followed this up in 2004 with the sixth installment in the popular Kaldor City series, Storm Mine which to date is the final installment of that series.
He has also written the audio drama Timeless Passages for the Bernice Summerfield series, released by Big Finish Productions in August 2006.
[edit] Bibliography
Novels/Novellas
- Falls the Shadow (Virgin, 1994)
- The Man in the Velvet Mask (Virgin, 1996)
- The Book of the War Contributor (Mad Norwegian Press, 2002)
- The Cabinet of Light (Telos Publishing, 2003)
Audio Drama
- Kaldor City: Storm Mine (Magic Bullet Productions, 2004)
- Professor Bernice Summerfield: Timeless Passages (Big Finish Productions, 2006)