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Novelization

Adaptation of another work into a novel


Adaptation of another work into a novel

A novelization (or novelisation) is a derivative novel that adapts the story of a work created for another medium, such as a film, TV series, stage play, comic book, or video game. Film novelizations were particularly popular before the advent of home video, but continue to find commercial success as part of marketing campaigns for major films. They are often written by accomplished writers based on an early draft of the film's script and on a tight deadline.

History and purpose

Novelizations of films began to be produced in the 1910s and 1920s for silent films such as Les Vampires (1915–16) and London After Midnight (1927). One of the first films with spoken dialogue to be novelized was King Kong (1933). Film novelizations were especially profitable during the 1970s before home video became available, as they were then the only way to re-experience popular movies other than television airing or a rerelease in theaters. The novelizations of Star Wars (1977), Alien (1979) and Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) sold millions of copies.

The first ever video game to be novelised was Shadowkeep, in 1984.

Even after the advent of home video, film novelizations remain popular, with the adaptation of Godzilla (2014) being included on The New York Times Best Seller list for mass-market paperbacks. This has been attributed to these novels' appeal to fans: about 50% of novelizations are sold to people who have watched the film and want to explore its characters further, or to reconnect to the enthusiasm they experienced when watching the film. A film is therefore also a sort of commercial for its novelization; the film's success or failure affects the novelization's sales. Conversely, film novelizations help generate publicity for upcoming films, serving as a link in the film's marketing chain.

According to publishing industry estimates, about one or two percent of the audience of a film will buy its novelization. This makes these relatively inexpensively produced works a commercially attractive proposition in the case of blockbuster film franchises. The increasing number of previously established novelists taking on tie-in works has been credited with these works gaining a "patina of respectability" after they had previously been disregarded in literary circles as derivative and mere merchandise.

Variants

Film

''King Kong'' (1932) novelization of ''King Kong'' (1933). The novel was based on the screenplay and was marketing for the film which was released two months later.

The writer of a novelization is supposed to multiply the 20,000–25,000 words of a screenplay into at least 60,000 words. Writers usually achieve that by adding description or introspection. Ambitious writers are driven to work on transitions and characters just to accomplish "a more prose-worthy format". Sometimes the "novelizer" invents new scenes in order to give the plot "added dimension", provided they are allowed to do that. Publishers aim to have novelizations in shops before a film is released, which means it is usually necessary to base the novelization on a screenplay instead of the completed film. It might take an insider to tell whether a novelization diverges unintentionally from the final film because it is based on an earlier version which included deleted scenes. Thus the novelization occasionally presents material which will later on appear in a director's cut. In some cases, separate novelizations of the same film are written for publication in different countries, and these may be based on different drafts of the screenplay, as was very clearly the case with the American and British novelizations of Capricorn One. Writers select different approaches to enrich a screenplay. Dewey Gram's Gladiator, for example, included historical background information.

If a film is based on a novel, the original novel is generally reissued with a cover based on the film's poster. If a film company also wishes to have a separate novelization published, the company is supposed to approach the author who has "Separated Rights". A writer has these rights if he contributed the source material (or added a great deal of creative input to it) and if he was moreover properly credited.

Novelizations also exist where the film itself is based on an original novel: novelist and screenwriter Christopher Wood wrote a novelization of the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me. Although the 1962 Ian Fleming novel was still available in bookstores, its story had nothing to do with the 1977 film. To avoid confusion, Wood's novelization was titled James Bond, the Spy Who Loved Me. This novel is also an example of a screenwriter novelizing his own screenplay. Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker was published under the name of George Lucas but his script had been novelized by the prolific tie-in writer Alan Dean Foster.

Acquiring editors looking for a novelizer have different issues. The author may not have all of the information needed; Foster wrote the Alien novelization without knowing what the Xenomorph looked like. The contract may be very restrictive; Max Allan Collins had to write the novelization for Road to Perdition only based on the film, without the detail he had created for the graphic novel of the same name that the film is based on. Rewrites of scripts may force last-minute novelization rewrites. The script for the 1966 film Modesty Blaise was rewritten by five different authors. The writer or script doctor responsible for the so-called "final" version is not necessarily the artist who has contributed the original idea or most of the scenes. The patchwork character of a film script might even exacerbate because the film director, a principal actor or a consulting script doctor does rewrites during the shooting. An acquiring editor who intends to hire one of the credited screenwriters has to reckon that the early writers are no longer familiar with the current draft or work already on another film script. Not every screenwriter is available, willing to work for less money than what can be earned with film scripts and able to deliver the required amount of prose on time. Even if so, there is still the matter of novelizations having a questionable reputation. The International Association of Media Tie-In Writers concedes that by saying their craft is "largely unrecognized". Writers Guild of America rules require that screenwriters have right of first refusal to write novelizations of their own films, but they rarely do so because of the lack of prestige and money.

Some novels blur the line between a novelization and an original novel that is the basis of a film adaptation. Arthur C. Clarke provided the ideas for Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. Based on his own short stories and his cooperation with Kubrick during the preparation and making of this film adaptation he wrote the film novelization of the same name which is appreciated by fans because the film provides little exposition, and the novelization fills in some blanks. David Morrell wrote the novel First Blood about John Rambo, which led to the film adaptation of the same name. Although Rambo dies at the end of his original story, Morrell had a paragraph in his contract stipulating he remained "the only person who could write books about Rambo". This paid off for him when the film producers changed the ending and decided for a sequel. David Morrell accepted to carry out the novelization and negotiated unprecedented liberties which resulted in a likewise unprecedented success when his book entered The New York Times Best Seller list and stayed there for six weeks.

Simon Templar or James Bond are examples of media franchises that have been popular for more than one generation. When the feature film The Saint was released in 1997 the creator of this character (Leslie Charteris) had already been dead for four years. Hence its novelization had to be written by another author. Ian Fleming on the other hand had official successors who wrote contemporary "Post-Fleming" James Bond novels. During his tenure John Gardner was consequently chosen to write the novelization of Licence to Kill in 1989 and also the novelization of GoldenEye in 1995. John Gardner found his successor in Raymond Benson who wrote besides several original Bond novels three novelizations including The World Is Not Enough.

Comics

While comic books such as the series Classics Illustrated have often provided adaptations of novels, novelizations of comics are relatively rare. The Adventures of Superman, written by George Lowther and published in 1942, is the first novelization of a comic book character.

Video games

Video games are novelized in the same manner as films. While gamers might enjoy playing a certain action scene for hours, the buyers of a novelization might be bored soon if they merely read about such a scene. Consequently, the writer will have to cut down on the action.

Authors

Novelization writers are often also accomplished original fiction writers, as well as fans of the works they adapt, which helps motivate them to undertake a commission that is generally compensated with a relatively low flat fee. Alan Dean Foster, for example, said that, as a fan, "I got to make my own director's cut. I got to fix the science mistakes, I got to enlarge on the characters, if there was a scene I particularly liked, I got to do more of it, and I had an unlimited budget. So it was fun".

Writing skill is particularly needed for challenging situations common to writing novelizations of popular media, such as lack of access to information about the film, last-minute script changes and very quick turnaround times. Collins had to write the novelization of In the Line of Fire in nine days.

Although novelizations tend to have a low prestige, and are often viewed as "hackwork", several critically acclaimed literary authors have written novelizations, including Arthur Calder-Marshall, William Kotzwinkle and Richard Elman. Best-selling author Ken Follett, early in his career, also wrote a novelization, and so did Isaac Asimov, later in his career. While increasingly also a domain of previously established novelists, tie-in writing still has the disadvantages, from the writers' point of view, of modest pay, tight deadlines and no ownership in the intellectual property created.

The International Association of Media Tie-In Writers is an American association that aims to recognize the writers of adapted and tie-in fiction. It hands out annual awards, the "Scribes", in categories including "best adapted novel".

TV series

Doctor Who had stories novelised in particular from the era of its original series published by Target Books.

Episodes of Star Trek were adapted into short stories by the noted science fiction writer James Blish. Each volume of the stories included a number of the short story adaptations. Alan Dean Foster would later adapt the follow-up animated series into the Star Trek Log series.

Mel Gilden wrote novelizations of Beverly Hills, 90210, merging three episodes into one book. As he explained, this approach required him to look for a joint story arc.

Comics

In the early 1970s Lee Falk was asked by the Avon publishing house to deliver Phantom novels based on the eponymous comic strip. Falk worked on the novelizations on his own and with collaboration. A dispute over how he would be credited led to the cessation of the series.

Peter O'Donnell, who scripted the Modesty Blaise comic strip, later authored novels featuring the character not directly based on the stories presented in the strips.

Video games

Matt Forbeck became a writer of novels based on video games after he had been "writing tabletop roleplaying game books for over a decade". He worked also as a designer of video games.

S. D. Perry wrote a series of novels based on the Resident Evil video games and added tie-ins to the novelizations, covering all the mainline titles in the series up until Resident Evil Zero.

Eric Nylund introduced a new concept for a novelization when he delivered a trilogy, consisting of a prequel titled Halo: The Fall of Reach, an actual novelization titled Halo: First Strike and a sequel titled Halo: Ghosts of Onyx.

Raymond Benson novelized the original Metal Gear Solid in 2008 and its sequel Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, while Project Itoh wrote a Japanese language novelization of Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots also in 2008 (with an English adaptation later published in 2012). Itoh was set to write novelizations of Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater and Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker, but his death in 2009 resulted in these projects being handed to Beatless author Satoshi Hase and a new writer named Hitori Nojima (a pen name for Kenji Yano) respectively. Kojima would go on to write Metal Gear Solid: Substance (a two-part alternate novelization of the original Metal Gear Solid and Metal Gear Solid 2), as well as the novelizations of Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain and Death Stranding (a game which he helped write the script for).

Orphaned novelizations

In some cases an otherwise standard novel may be based on an unfilmed screenplay. Ian Fleming's 1961 James Bond novel Thunderball was based on a script he had co-written; in this case his collaborators subsequently sued for plagiarism.

Peter O'Donnell's novel Modesty Blaise was a novelization of a refused film script. In this case the creator of the main character had written the script alone, but later on other authors had changed O'Donnell's original script over and over, until merely one single sentence remained from the original. The novel was released a year before the film and unlike the film it had sequels.

Frederick Forsyth's 1979 novel The Devil's Alternative was based on an unfilmed script he had written.

Cormac McCarthy's 2005 novel No Country for Old Men was adapted from a screenplay the author wrote. This allowed the Coen brothers to stick "almost word for word" faithfully to the book when adapting it back into a screenplay for the acclaimed 2007 film of the same name.

Occasionally a novelization is issued even though the film is never made. Gordon Williams wrote the script and novelization for producer Harry Saltzman's abandoned film The Micronauts.

Lists of novelizations

Novels based on comics

  • List of novels based on comics

Novels based on films

Main article: Category:Novels based on films

Novels by franchise

FranchiseTitleAuthor(s)ISBNPublisherNotes
Back to the FutureBack to the Future (1985)George GipeBerkley BooksNovelization of the film.
Back to the Future Part II (1989)Craig Shaw GardnerNovelization of the film.
Back to the Future Part III (1990)Novelization of the film.
Bad News BearsThe Bad News Bears (1976)Richard WoodleyDell PublishingNovelization of the film.
The Bad News Bears in Breaking Training (1977)Novelization of the film.
The Bad News Bears Go to Japan (1978)Novelization of the film.
Blade RunnerBlade Runner: A Story of the Future (1982)Les MartinRandom HouseNovelization of the film.
Blade Runner 2: The Edge of Human (1995)K. W. JeterBantam BooksSequel novel to the original film.
Blade Runner 3: Replicant Night (1996)SpectraSecond sequel novel to the original film.
Blade Runner 4: Eye and Talon (2000)GollanczThird sequel novel to the original film.
Dollars TrilogyA Fistful of Dollars (1972)Frank ChandlerTandemNovelization of the film.
For a Few Dollars More (1965)Joe MillardAward BooksNovelization of the film.
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1967)Novelization of the film.
A Dollar to Die For (1967)Brian FoxOriginal novel.
A Coffin Full of Dollars (1971)Joe MillardOriginal novel.
The Devil's Dollar Sign (1972)Original novel.
Blood for a Dirty Dollar (1973)Original novel.
The Million-Dollar Bloodhunt (1973)Original novel.
E.T. the Extra-TerrestrialE.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)William KotzwinkleBerkley BooksNovelization of the film.
E.T.: The Book of the Green Planet (1985)Sequel novel, published three years after the original film.
Friday the 13thFriday the 13th Part 3 3-D (1982)Michael AvalloneTower & Leisure Sales Co.First novelization of the film.
Jason Lives: Friday the 13th Part VI (1986)Simon HawkeSignetNovelization of the film.
Friday the 13th (1987)Novelization of the 1980 film.
Friday the 13th Part II (1988)Novelization of the film.
Friday the 13th Part III (1988)Second novelization of the film.
Friday the 13th: Mother's Day (1994)William Pattinson (as Eric Morse)Berkley BooksCamp Crystal Lake series; the fifth installment was published as e-book; self-published by the author.
Friday the 13th: Jason's Curse (1994)
Friday the 13th: The Carnival (1994)
Friday the 13th: Road Trip (1994)
Friday the 13th: The Mask of Jason Voorhees (2011)None
Freddy vs. Jason (2005)Stephen HandNovelization of the film.
Jason X (2005)Pat CadiganNovelization of the film.
Jason X: The Experiment (2005)Black FlameJason X series
Jason X: Planet of the Beast (2005)Nancy KilpatrickBlack Flame
Jason X: Death Moon (2005)Alex JohnsonBlack Flame
Jason X: To the Third Power (2006)Nancy KilpatrickBlack Flame
Friday the 13th: Church of the Divine Psychopath (2005)Scott PhillipsBlack FlameFriday the 13th series
Friday the 13th: Hell Lake (2005)Paul WoodsBlack Flame
Friday the 13th: Hate-Kill-Repeat (2005)Jason ArnoppBlack Flame
Friday the 13th: The Jason Strain (2006)Chris FaustBlack Flame
Friday the 13th: Carnival of Maniacs (2006)Stephen HandBlack Flame
GhostbustersGhostbusters (1984)Larry MilneCoronet BooksNovelization of the 1984 film.
Ghostbusters: The Return (2004)Sholly FischI BooksNon-canon alternate sequel to Ghostbusters and Ghostbusters II.
HalloweenHalloween (1979)Curtis RichardsBantam BooksNovelization of the 1978 film.
Halloween II (1981)Jack MartinZebraNovelization of the film.
Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)Jove BooksNovelization of the film.
Halloween IV (1988)Nicholas GrabowskyCritic's Choice PaperbacksNovelization of the film Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers.
Halloween: The Scream Factory (1997)Kelly O'RourkeBoulevard BooksOriginal novel.
Halloween: The Old Myers Place (1997)Original novel.
Halloween: The Mad House (1998)Original novel.
Halloween (2018)John PassarellaNovelization of the 2018 film.
Halloween Kills (2021)Tim WaggonerTitan BooksNovelization of the 2021 film.
Halloween Ends (2022)Paul Brad LoganTitan BooksNovelization of the 2022 film.
Happy Death DayHappy Death Day & Happy Death Day 2U (2019)Aaron HartzlerAnchor BooksTwo novelizations in one volume.
HerbieThe Love Bug (1969)Mel CebulashScholastic Book ServicesNovelization of the film.
Herbie Rides Again (1974)Novelization of the film.
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo (1977)Vic CrumeNovelization of the film.
Herbie Goes Bananas (1980)Joe ClaroNovelization of the film.
Herbie: Fully Loaded (2005)Irene TrimbleRandom House Children's BooksJunior novelization of the film.
Indiana JonesRaiders of the Lost Ark (1981)Campbell BlackDel Rey BooksNovelization of the film.
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)James KahnBallantine BooksNovelization of the film.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)Rob MacGregorBallantine BooksNovelization of the film.
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)James RollinsDel ReyNovelization of the film.
It's AliveIt's Alive (1977)Richard WoodleyBallantine BooksNovelization of the film.
It Lives Again (1978)James DixonBallantine BooksNovelization of the film.
JawsJaws 2 (1978)Hank SearlsBantam BooksNovelization of the film.
Jaws: The Revenge (1987)Berkley BooksNovelization of the film.
James BondJames Bond, the Spy Who Loved Me (1977)Christopher WoodJonathan CapeNovelization of the film.
James Bond and Moonraker (1979)Novelization of the film.
King KongKing Kong (1932)Delos W. LovelaceGrosset & DunlapNovelization of the 1933 film.
King Kong (2005)Christopher GoldenPocket Star BooksNovelization of the 2005 film.
Living DeadNight of the Living Dead (1974)John A. RussoWarner Paperback LibraryNovelization of the 1968 film.
Return of the Living Dead (1977)John A. RussoDale PublishingAlternate sequel novel to the 1968 film; later adapted to film as The Return of the Living Dead (1985).
Dawn of the Dead (1978)George A. Romero
Susanna SparrowSt. Martin's PressNovelization of the 1978 film.
The Living Dead (2020)George A. Romero
Daniel KrausTor BooksOriginal novel.
Mad MaxMad Max (1979)Terry KayeCircus BooksNovelization of the film.
Mad Max 2 (1981)Carl RuhanQB BooksNovelization of the film.
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985)Joan D. VingeWarner BooksNovelization of the film.
A Nightmare on Elm StreetThe Nightmares on Elm Street Parts 1, 2, 3: The Continuing Story (1987)Jeffrey CooperSt. Martin's PressNovelization of the 1984 film and the sequels Freddy's Revenge and Dream Warriors.
The Nightmares on Elm Street Parts 4 & 5 (1989)Joseph LockeNovelization of the films The Dream Master and The Dream Child.
Wes Craven's New Nightmare (1994)David BergantinoTor BooksNovelization of the film.
The OmenThe Omen (1976)David SeltzerFutura Books
SignetNovelization of the 1976 film.
Damien: Omen II (1978)Joseph HowardNovelization of the film.
The Final Conflict (1981)Gordon McGillNovelization of the film.
Omen IV: Armageddon 2000 (1983)First of two novels set after The Final Conflict, unrelated to the 1991 film Omen IV: The Awakening.
Omen V: The Abomination (1985)Second of two novels set after The Final Conflict.
The Oz BooksThe Scarecrow of Oz (1915)L. Frank BaumNoneReilly & BrittonNovelization of the 1914 silent film, His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz.
Tik-Tok of Oz (1914)Novelization of the 1913 play, The Tik-Tok Man of Oz.
Return to Oz (1985)Joan D. VingeBallantine BooksNovelization of the film.
Alistair HedleyPuffin BooksJunior novelization; published as part of the "Young Puffin" series.
The Pink PantherThe Pink Panther (1963)Martin AlbertBantam BooksNovelization of the 1963 film.
The Return of the Pink Panther (1975)Frank WaldmanBallantine Books
Futura BooksNovelization of the film.
The Pink Panther Strikes Again (1976)Novelization of the film.
The Pink Panther (2006)Max Allan CollinsNovelization of the 2006 film.
Planet of the ApesBeneath the Planet of the Apes (1970)Michael AvalloneBantam BooksNovelization of the film.
Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971)Jerry PournelleAward BooksNovelization of the film.
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972)John JakesNovelization of the film.
Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973)David GerroldNovelization of the film.
RamboRambo: First Blood Part II (1985)David MorrellJove BooksNovelization of the film.
Rambo III (1988)Novelization of the film.
The Shaggy DogThe Shaggy Dog (1967)Elizabeth L. Griffen[none]Scholastic Book ServicesNovelization of the 1959 film.
The Shaggy D.A. (1976)Vic CrumeFawcett PublicationsNovelization of the film.
SpeciesSpecies (1995)Yvonne NavarroBantam BooksNovelization of the film.
Species II (1998)Tom Doherty Associates, LLCNovelization of the film.
Witch MountainReturn from Witch Mountain (1978)Alexander KeyWestminster PressNovelization of the film.
Race to Witch Mountain (2009)James PontiNovelization of the film.

Standalone novels

TitleAuthorCatalog / ISBNPublisherDateNotesDr. CyclopsLady and the Tramp: The Story of Two DogsMonster GodzillaBlood FeastTwo Thousand Maniacs!The Story of Walt Disney's Motion Picture – Mary PoppinsThe Story of Walt Disney's Motion Picture – The Jungle BookHouse of Dark ShadowsTHX 1138Super FlyCoffyThat Darn CatBlazing SaddlesEarthquakeThe Sugarland ExpressBlack ChristmasOne of Our Dinosaurs Is MissingSuperdadThe Three CaballerosWalt Disney's Alice in Wonderland (1977)CommunionClose Encounters of the Third KindHandle with CareTreasure of MatecumbeThe Cat from Outer SpaceThe Deer HunterHot Lead and Cold FeetIn Search of the CastawaysWalt Disney's The Jungle Book (1978)Pete's Dragon (US)Pete's Dragon (UK)Warlords of AtlantisThe Wicker Man1941American GigoloThe Apple Dumpling Gang Rides AgainThe Black HoleThe Complete American Graffiti: The NovelMeteorProphecyThe Spaceman and King ArthurThe FogThe AwakeningDead & BuriedThe FunhouseHeavy MetalRiding HighThe Last Flight of Noah's Ark (US)The Last Flight of Noah's Ark (UK)Midnight MadnessSaturn 3Snowball ExpressTeddyButcher, Baker, Nightmare MakerCondorman (US)Condorman (UK)The Devil and Max DevlinDragonslayerFinal ExamThe Fox and the HoundGallipoliHawk the SlayerThe WaveZorro, The Gay BladePoltergeistBuckaroo BanzaiSplashBabyEscape from New YorkFright NightThe Journey of Natty GannOne Magic ChristmasMy Science ProjectReturn of the Living DeadThe TerminatorYoung Sherlock HolmesThe AristocatsDown and Out in Beverly HillsLady and the TrampRoboCopRuthless PeopleShort CircuitSong of the SouthAdventures in BabysittingHarry and the HendersonsLethal WeaponThe Lost BoysOutrageous FortuneRe-AnimatorTin MenTucker: The Man and His DreamWho Framed Roger RabbitWho Framed Roger RabbitWillowThe AbyssBlack RainDead Poets SocietyHoney, I Shrunk the KidsHoney, I Shrunk the KidsTotal RecallDarkmanHudson HawkBram Stoker's DraculaFar and AwayDemolition Man12 MonkeysLord of IllusionsDragonheartSpace JamMars Attacks!Good BurgerMen in BlackDark CityMulanThe Iron GiantThe Road to El DoradoPirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black PearlThe PunisherVan HelsingSnakes on a PlaneThe Toxic Avenger: The NovelV for Vendetta30 Days of NightJennifer's BodyParaNormanPacific RimManos: The Hands of FateKubo and the Two StringsPlan 9 from Outer SpaceZootopiaMean GirlsThe House on Haunted HillPan's Labyrinth: The Labyrinth of the FaunNightmare PavilionFreshwaterOnce Upon a Time in Hollywood
Henry KuttnerCatalog: 445-02485-060 (1967 paperback)
ISBN: / (1967 paperback); / (1976 paperback)Stellar Publishing (original); Phoenix Press (1940 hardback); Popular Library (1967 paperback); Centaur Books (1976 paperback)June 1940 (original)Novelization of the film, first published as a installment in the Thrilling Wonder Stories pulp magazine (June 1940).
Ward Greene53-10818Simon & Schuster1953First novelization of the 1955 film, published two years before the release of the source film.
Shigeru Kayama[none] (original)Iwatani BookstoreOctober 25, 1954Radio drama of the film Godzilla.
Herschell Gordon LewisNovel Books1964Novelization of the film.
Herschell Gordon LewisNovel Books1964Novelization of the film.
Mary Virginia Carey2317Whitman Publishing Company1964Young adult novelization of the 1964 film.
Mary Virginia Carey2726Whitman Publishing Company1967Young adult novelization of the 1967 film.
Marilyn Ross64-537Paperback LibraryOctober 1970Novelization of the film.
Ben Bova/Paperback Library1971Novelization of the film.
Philip FentySphere Books1972Novelization of the film.
Paul W. Fairman75487-095Lancer Books1973Novelization of the film
The Gordons/Scholastic Book Services1973Novelization of the 1965 film, published eight years after the release of the source film.
Tad RichardsWarner Paperback Library1974Novelization of the film.
George Fox/Signet BooksDecember 1974Novelization of the film.
Henry Clement445-08276-125Popular Library1974Novelization of the film.
Lee Hays445-08467-150Popular Library1976Novelization of the film.
John Harvey/New English LibraryMarch 4, 1976Novelization of the film.
Ann Spanoghe/New English LibraryNovember 1976Novelization of the film.
Jimmy Corinis/New English LibraryFebruary 5, 1976Second novelization of the 1944 film.
Ann Spano/ (UK)New English Library (UK); Wonder Books (US)February 3, 1977 (UK)Novelization of the 1951 film of the same title.
Frank LauriaRandom House Publishing1977Novelization of the film, better known as Alice, Sweet Alice.
Steven Spielberg, Leslie WallerDell Books1977Novelization of the film.
E. M. CorderPocket Books1977Novel "Citizen's Band" was original name of edited, re-titled and re-released film.
Derry Moffatt/New English LibraryApril 1977Novelization of the film.
Ted Key/Pocket BooksJune 1978Novelization of the film.
E. M. Corder/Jove Books1978Novelization of the film.
Ted Sparks/Scholastic Book Services1978Novelization of the film.
Hettie Jones/Pocket BooksFebruary 1978Novelization of the film, published 16 years after the release of the source film.
Jean Bethell/Wonder Books (1978); Ottenheimer Publishers (1984)1978, 1984First junior novelization of the 1967 film.
Jean Bethell/Wonder Books1978American novelization of the 1977 film.
Dewy Moffatt/New English LibraryOctober 1978British novelization of the 1977 film.
Paul Victor/Futura Books1978Novelization of the film.
Robin Hardy, Anthony ShafferCrown Publishing Group1978Novelization of the film.
Bob Gale/Ballantine Books1979Novelization of the film.
Timothy Harris/Dell Publishing1979Novelization of the film; published a year before the release of the source film.
Gary Poole/Ace BooksJune 1979Novelization of the film.
Alan Dean Foster/Del Rey BooksDecember 1979Novelization of the film.
John Minahan/Berkley Books1979Novelization of the films American Graffiti and More American Graffiti.
Edmund H. North, Franklin CoenWarner BooksOctober 1979Novelization of the film.
David Seltzer/Ballantine Books1979Novelization of the film.
Heather Simon/New English LibraryAugust 1979British novelization of the film Unidentified Flying Oddball, under the alternative title.
Dennis Etchison/Bantam Books1980Novelization of the film.
Ronald Chetwynd-Hayes1980Novelization of the film, which in turn was based on Bram Stoker's novel The Jewel of Seven Stars
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro1980
Dean KoontzJove Books1980Novelization of the film, released a year before its source material.
L.F. Blake/Magnum Littlehampton Book Services1980Novelization of the film.
Novelization of the film.
Chas Carner/Ballantine Books1980American novelization of the film.
Heather Simon/New English Library1980British novelization of the film.
Tom Wright/Ace Books1980Novelization of the film.
Steve Gallagher/Sphere Books1980Novelization of the film.
Joe Claro/Scholastic Book Services1980Novelization of the film, released eight years after its source.
John GaultBantam Books1980Novelization of the film The Pit, released a year before its source.
Joseph Burgo, Richard NatalePocket Books1981Novelization of the film.
Joe Claro/ (original)
/ (reprint)Scholastic Book Services1981American novelization of the film.
Heather Simon/New English Library1981British novelization of the film.
Robert Grossbach/Ballantine Books1981Novelization of the film.
Wayland Drew/Ballantine Books1981Novelization of the film.
Geoffrey MeyerPinnacle Books1981Novelization of the film.
Heather Simon/Archway PaperbacksDecember 1981First novelization of the film.
Jack BennettSt. Martins Press1981Novelization of the film.
Terry Marcel
Harry Robertson/New English Library1981Novelization of the film.
Todd StrasserDell Publishing1981Novelization of the film.
Les DeanLeisure Books1981Novelization of the film.
James KahnGrand Central Pub1982Novelization of the film.
Earl Mac RauchPocket Books1984Novelization of the film.
Ian Don/Star Books1984Novelization of the film.
Ian Don/Star Books1985Novelization of the film.
Mike McQuayBantam Books1985Novelization of the film.
John Skipp, Craig SpectorGoldmann1985Novelization of the film.
Ann Matthews/Archway Paperbacks1985Novelization of the film.
Martin Noble/W. H. Allen & Co.1985Novelization of the film.
Mike McQuay/Bantam Books1985Novelization of the film.
John A. Russo/Arrow Books1985Novelization of the film.
Randall Frakes, William Wisher Jr.Spectra Books1985Novelization of the film.
Alan Arnold/Grafton1985Novelization of the film.
Victoria CrensonOttenheimer Publishers1986Junior novelization of the film.
Ian Marter/Star Books1986Novelization of the film.
Victoria CrensonOttenheimer Publishers1986Junior novelization of the film.
Ed NahaDell Publishing1986Novelization of the 1987 film.
Martin Noble/Star Books1986Novelization of the film.
Colin Wedgelock/Sphere Books1986Novelization of the film.
Victoria CrensonOttenheimer Publishers1986Junior novelization of the film.
Elizabeth Faucher/Point1987Novelization of the film.
Joyce Thompson/Berkley Books1987Novelization of the film
Kirk MitchellBantam Books1987Novelization of the film.
Craig Shaw GardnerBerkley Books1987Novelization of the film.
Robin Turner/Star Books1987Novelization of the film.
Jeff RovinPocket Books1987Novelization of the film.
Martin Noble/Star Books1987Novelization of the film.
Robert Tine/Pocket Books1988Novelization of the film.
Martin Noble/Star Books1988Novelization of the film.
Justine KormanPuffin Books1988Junior novelization of the film.
Wayland Drew/Ballantine Books1988Novelization of the film.
Orson Scott Card/Pocket Books1989Novelization of the film.
Mike Cogan/Pocket Books1989Novelization of the film.
Nancy H. KleinbaumHyperion Books1989Novelization of the film.
Elizabeth Faucher/Fantail1989Novelization of the film.
Bonnie Bryant Hiller and Neil W. Hiller/Scholastic, Inc.1989Junior novelization of the film.
Piers AnthonyArrow Books1989Novelization of the 1990 film.
Randall BoyllJove1990Novelization of the film.
Geoffrey Marsh/Jove Books1991Novelization of the film.
Fred Saberhagen, James V. HartSignet Books1992Novelization of the film.
Sonja MassieBerkley Books1992Novelization of the film.
Robert TineE. P. Dutton1993Novelization of the film.
Elizabeth HandHarperPrism1995Novelization of the film.
Clive BarkerLittle, Brown and Company1995Novelization of the film.
Charles Edward PogueBerkley Books1996Novelization of the film.
Francine Hughes/Scholastic Corporation1996Novelization of the film.
Jonathan Gems/Signet Books1996Novelization of the film.
Joseph LockePocket Books1997Novelization of the film.
Steve PerryBantam Books1997Novelization of the film.
Frank LauriaSt. Martin's Press1998Novelization of the film.
Cathy East DubowskiDisney Press1998Junior novelization of the film.
James PrellerScholastic Corporation1999Junior novelization of the film.
Peter Lerangis/Puffin Books2000Novelization of the film.
Irene TrimbleDisney Press2003Junior novelization of the film.
D.A. SternDel Rey Books2004Novelization of the film.
Kevin RyanHarperCollins2004Novelization of the film.
Christa FaustGames Workshop2006Novelization of the film.
Lloyd Kaufman, Adam JahnkeRunning Press2006Novelization of the film.
Steve MoorePocket Star Books2006Novelization of the film.
Tim LebbonPocket Star Books2007Novelization of the film.
Audrey NixonHarperFestival2009Novelization of the film.
Elizabeth Cody KimmelLittle, Brown Books for Young Readers2012Novelization of the film.
Alex IrvineTitan Books2013Novelization of the film.
Stephen D. SullivanWalkabout Publishing2015Novelization of the film.
Sadie ChesterfieldLittle, Brown and Company2016Novelization of the film.
Matthew EwaldDarkstone Productions, LLC2016Novelization of the film.
Suzanne FrancisDisney Press2016Junior novelization of the film.
Micol OstowScholastic Corporation2017Novelization of the film.
Tommy JamersonNext Stage Press2019Novelization of the film.
Guillermo del Toro, Cornelia FunkeKatherine Tegen2019Novelization of the film.
Andy RauschHappy Cloud Publishing2020Novelization of the film Carnival of Souls.
Julian Michael CarverSevered Press2021Novelization of the film.
Quentin Tarantino/Harper Perennial2021Novelization of the film.

Novels based on plays

Main article: Category:Novels based on plays

  • The Scarlet Pimpernel (1908), Baroness Orczy
  • Bought and Paid For (1912), Arthur Hornblow
  • Peg o' My Heart (1913), J. Hartley Manners
  • Peter and Wendy (1911), J. M. Barrie
  • The Bat (1926), Stephen Vincent Benét
  • The Girl of the Golden West (1911), David Belasco
  • The Lion and the Mouse (1906), Arthur Hornblow
  • The Master Mind (1913), Marvin Dana
  • The Passing of the Third Floor Back (1935), Claude Houghton
  • The Return of Peter Grimm (1912), David Belasco

Novels based on television programs

Main article: Category:Novels based on television series

Standalone novels

TitleAuthorPublisherISBNPublication dateNotes
Flight into Danger (1958)John Castle and Arthur HaileySouvenir Press[none]1958Novelization of the CBC play of the same title; later adapted as the television film Terror in the Sky (1971).
Boy Dominic (1974)Geoffrey MorganArmada Books1974Based on the Yorkshire series of the same title.
The View from Daniel Pike (1974)Edward Boyd and Bill Knox
Intimate Strangers (1974)Alan WykesNew English LibrarySeptember 1974Novelization of the LWT series of the same title.
The Organization (1974)Philip Mackie
Arthur of the Britons (1975)Rex EdwardsTarget Books1975Original novel on the Harlech series of the same title.
Victorian Scandals (1976)Peter WildebloodArrow Books1976Original novel on the Granada series of the same title.
Danger UXB (1979)Michael BeakerPan Books and Macmillian London1979Original novel based on the Thames series of the same title.
Quest of Eagles (1979)Richard Cooper
The Omega Factor (1979)Jack Gerson
The Ravelled Thread (1979)John LucarottiPuffin Books
The Further Adventures of Oliver Twist (1980)David ButlerFutura Publications1980Novelization of the ATV serial of the same title.
Automan (1984)Martin NobleTarget Books1984Novelization of the pilot episode of the series of the same title.
By the Sword Divided (1983)Mollie Hardwick
The Bounder (1983)Eric Chappell
The Outsider (1983)Hugh Miller
Morgan's Boy (1984)Alick RoweSphere Books1984Novelization of the BBC One series of the same title.
Mitch (1984)Roger MarkNew English Library1984Novelization of the LWT series of the same title.
Charlie (1984)Nigel Williams
Lytton's Diary (1985)Ray Connolly
Connie (1985)Ron Hutchinson
The Collectors (1986)Evan ChristieNovelization of the BBC One series of the same title.

Novels by series

SeriesTitleAuthor(s)ISBNPublisherNotes
Battlestar Galactica (1978)Battlestar Galactica (1978)Glen A. Larson and Robert ThurstonNovelization of the pilot episode "Saga of a Star World".
Battlestar Galactica 2: The Cylon Death Machine (1979)Novelization
Battlestar Galactica 3: The Tombs of Kobol (1979)Novelization
Battlestar Galactica 4: The Young Warriors (1979)Novelization
Battlestar Galactica 5: Galactica Discovers Earth (1980)Glen A. Larson and Michael ResnickNovelization of the episode of the same title from Galactica 1980.
Battlestar Galactica 6: The Living Legend (1980)Glen A. Larson and Nicholas YermakovNovelization
Battlestar Galactica 7: War of the Gods (1980)Novelization
Battlestar Galactica 8: Greetings from Earth (1980)Glen A. Larson and Ron GoulartNovelization
Battlestar Galactica 9: Experiment in Terra (1980)Novelization
Battlestar Galactica 10: The Long Patrol (1980)Novelization
Battlestar Galactica 11: The Nightmare Machine (1980)Glen A. Larson and Robert ThurstonOriginal novel
Battlestar Galactica 12: "Die, Chameleon!" (1980)Original novel
Battlestar Galactica 13: Apollo's War (1980)Original novel
Battlestar Galactica 14: Surrender the Galactica! (1980)Original novel
Ben CaseyBen Casey (1962)William JohnstonLancer Books
Ben Casey: A Rage for Justice (1962)Norman Daniels
Ben Casey: The Strength of His Hands (1963)Sam Elkin
Ben Casey: The Fire Within (1963)Norman Daniels
Buck Rogers in the 25th CenturyBuck Rogers in the 25th Century (1978)Addison E. SteeleNovelization of the pilot film.
Buck Rogers: That Man on Beta (1979)Novelization of an unproduced teleplay from the series.
  • Forty Days of Tucker J. (1983), Robert Leeson
  • Tucker's Luck (1985), Jan Needle
  • Tucker in Control (1985), Jan Needle

''[[The A-Team]]''

  • The A-Team
  • Small But Deadly Wars
  • When You Comin' Back, Range Rider?
  • Old Scores to Settle
  • Ten Percent of Trouble
  • Operation Desert Sun: The Untold Story, Charles Heath/Louis Chunovic
  • Bullets, Bikinis and Bells, Ron Renauld
  • Backwoods Menace, Ron Renauld
  • The Bend in the River, David George Deutsch
  • Death Vows, Max Hart

''[[Quantum Leap]]''

  • Quantum Leap: The Beginning (1990), Julie Robitaille
  • Quantum Leap: The Ghost and the Gumshoe (1990), Julie Robitaille
  • Quantum Leap: The Novel (1992), Ashley McConnell
  • Quantum Leap: Too Close for Comfort (1992), Ashley McConnell
  • Quantum Leap: The Wall (1992), Ashley McConnell
  • Quantum Leap: Prelude (1992), Ashley McConnell
  • Quantum Leap: Knights of the Morningstar (1994), Melanie Rawn
  • Quantum Leap: Search and Rescue (1994), Melissa Crandall
  • Quantum Leap: Random Measures (1995), Ashley McConnell
  • Quantum Leap: Pulitzer (1995), L. Elizabeth Storm
  • Quantum Leap: Double or Nothing (1995), C.J. Henderson and Laura Anne Gilman
  • Quantum Leap: Odyssey (1996), Barbara E. Walton
  • Quantum Leap: Independence (1996), John Peel
  • Quantum Leap: Angels Unaware (1997), L. Elizabeth Storm
  • Quantum Leap: Obsessions (1997), Carol Davis
  • Quantum Leap: Loch Ness Leap (1997), Sandy Schofield
  • Quantum Leap: Heat Wave (1997), Melanie Kent
  • Quantum Leap: Foreknowledge (1998), Christopher DeFilippis
  • Quantum Leap: Song and Dance (1998), Mindy Peterman
  • Quantum Leap: Mirror's Edge (2000), Carol Davis and Esther D. Reese--

Novels based on video games

  • List of novels based on video games

References

Works cited

References

  1. Jones, J. R.. (November 18, 2011). "You've seen the movie—now write the book". The Chicago Reader.
  2. (27 August 2014). "Yes, People Still Read Movie Novelizations ... And Write Them, Too".
  3. [http://archive.gamespy.com/legacy/interviews/afoster_a.shtm David Cuciz: GameSpy Interviews – Alan Dean Foster. The Writing Game, August 2000] {{webarchive. link. (2008-01-03)
  4. Kobel, Peter. (April 1, 2001). "To Some, a Movie Is Just an Outline for a Book". The New York Times.
  5. "David Morrell on Rambo".
  6. (4 January 2015). "Popular TV Series and Movies Maintain Relevance as Novels". The New York Times.
  7. "The Tie-In Life by Raymond Benson".
  8. (2007). "Film/Print: Novelisations and Capricorn One". M/C Journal.
  9. "Snakes on a Plane".
  10. Barry, Rick. (February 12, 2012). "Review: The Novelization of Disney's John Carter".
  11. "Theatrical Separated Rights".
  12. Busch, Jenna. (May 25, 2011). "Interview with Alan Dean Foster, Author of Terminator Salvation: The Official Movie Novelization".
  13. "Movies and TV".
  14. Gilden, Mel. "Are Novelizations the Scum of Literature?".
  15. (June 15, 2010). "What Is a Tie-In Writer?".
  16. "License to Kill".
  17. "Goldeneye".
  18. (January 26, 1995). "Gardner, Benson & Bond".
  19. (December 5, 1999). "The Son of the Phantom (1944–1946)".
  20. Asimov, Isaac. (1981). "In joy still felt: the autobiography of Isaac Asimov, 1954-1978.". Avon.
  21. "Lee Falk: Father of The Phantom".
  22. Forbeck, Matt. (July 22, 2010). "How to Write a Tie-In Novel". The Escapist.
  23. Kojima Productions. (June 13, 2016). "Just so you know; the "Hitori Nojima" from whose name is at the end of the trailer is actually our friend Kenji Yano".
  24. "Kevin McClory, Jack Whittingham and Ian Fleming".
  25. "Modesty Blaise Trivia".
  26. "Modesty Blaise Trivia".
  27. Nathan, Paul S.. (1975). "Rights and Permissions". [[Publishers Weekly]].
  28. Legge, Jeff. (2017-11-21). "From Script to Screen: No Country for Old Men".
  29. Patterson, John. (December 21, 2007). "We've killed a lot of animals". The Guardian.
  30. anonymous. (September 1977). "Bits & Pieces". [[Starlog]].
  31. "Godzilla - A Novelization|NOOK Book".
  32. [https://books.google.com/books?id=L8w2lUw2NOMC&dq=Ronald+Chetwynd-Hayes+movie+novelization+the+awakening&pg=PT28 Haunts: Reliquaries of the Dead]
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