My father was a fan of Prisoner… nothing really fanatical, but a fan. He got me into it by taping Dr. Who on the same tape he had some Prisoner episodes on.
One day we were watching his taping of the Doc and it ended, jumping into “The Girl Who Was Death” about 10 minutes in. I sat, riveted, to the TV.
I have the whole set on DVD, and have been saving my watching them for a time when I can invite my dad over, crack him a beer and sit with him to watch the shows.
The story about the mechanical Rover was thought by many people to be a myth … except, the DVD set includes production stills, among which are, indeed, pictures of the mechanical Rover prop.
I’ve got the graphic novel. And the Prisoner Companion. And the omnibus edition of the three Prisoner novels (one by Tom Disch and two not). God, I’m a geek. I’ve even got the GURPS: Prisoner RPG supplement lurking about somewhere.
You’ve got my attention here. If you can remember or find them, what are the names and authors of the other 2 novels (not the Disch one), and how good were they?
For anyone unable to click the link - the other two books were Who is Number 2? by Hank Stine, and A Day in the Life by David McDaniel. How good were they? Average.
I remember reading “the Penal Colony” when I was quite young - some adult had given me a book of Kafka short stories as ‘great, mind-improving literature’ (knowing the adult in question, I am certain she had not actually read them:p ). I was so impressed with its graphic descriptions of ‘meaningful’ tortures that I insisted on reading them to my mom at bedtime - only to have the book confiscated. :smack:
I think one or two clues in the last show indicate that the whole world is the Village, but that The Prisoner has achieved a kind of emancipation. No side runs the Village – more like the Village runs them.