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It's a mammoth undertaking and one that will only hold an appeal for a particular hardcore. As a member of that particular hardcore, this is crack to me.
Even with the hundreds of stories Parkin and Pearson have managed to fit into their chronology, there are still some too difficult, too outré, too... well, silly to be hammered in. This project is nothing if not the work of completists, however, so with this supplement the pair set about working out exactly when and where those stories they excluded from their main timeline take place.
That's the TV Comic strips of the 1960s (in which Dr Who and his bloodthirsty grandchildren deal with a host of menaces through the expedients of laser guns and carpet bombings), the infamous World Distributors annuals (in which the Doctor and his companions Sarah-Jane and Miss Jones embark on a succession of LSD trips), and other stories that make even those look mainstream (Parkin and Pearson find room to work in Jon Pertwee's in-character appearance at the 1991 Vodafone Exhibition).
Doctor Who isn't Star Trek; it's a franchise that'd be difficult to love without a healthy appreciation of the ridiculous. So many of the stories here are throwaway bits of fluff that none of their creators can have imagined would be picked over in such detail 50 years later. The Doctor Who universe covers all of time and space, and Unhistory has reminded me how much fun there is to be had in its maddest corners.