I looked it up, and there was a later edition of the novelisation that had Salamander on the cover, and apparently the issue was that before the mid-eighties the BBC had a policy that no previous Doctors were to appear on the cover of a novelisation in case it confused younger kids.
Another quick thing: Christopher Jones's art on the Titan Third Doctor comic (which features Salamander, initially impersonating the Second Doctor, on Earth in the UNIT era - turns out he was caught in the TARDIS's wake and, without the Doctor and friends knowing, dumped out along with them in Sixties London at the beginning of "The Web of Fear") really has to be praised in this context. In the big cliffhanger reveal panel, the body language and facial expression captures Troughton's Salamander perfectly, to the point that the "Ha ha, they don't know I'm Ramón Salamander" soliloquy speech bubble is needed only as a suggested online search term for any post-2005-only fans reading who don't know why there's suddenly an evil version of the Second Doctor.
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Another quick thing: Christopher Jones's art on the Titan Third Doctor comic (which features Salamander, initially impersonating the Second Doctor, on Earth in the UNIT era - turns out he was caught in the TARDIS's wake and, without the Doctor and friends knowing, dumped out along with them in Sixties London at the beginning of "The Web of Fear") really has to be praised in this context. In the big cliffhanger reveal panel, the body language and facial expression captures Troughton's Salamander perfectly, to the point that the "Ha ha, they don't know I'm Ramón Salamander" soliloquy speech bubble is needed only as a suggested online search term for any post-2005-only fans reading who don't know why there's suddenly an evil version of the Second Doctor.