Home
/
Fiction
/
Doctor Who and the Day of the Daleks
Doctor Who and the Day of the Daleks
Dec 3, 2025 1:57 AM

Author:Terrance Dicks

Doctor Who and the Day of the Daleks

UNIT is called in when an important diplomat is attacked in his own home - by a man who then vanishes into thin air. The Doctor and Jo spend a night in the 'haunted' house and meet the attackers - who have time-jumped back from the 22nd century in the hope of changing history.

Travelling forward in time, the Doctor and Jo find themselves trapped in a future world where humans are slaves and the Daleks have already invaded. Using their ape-like servants to Ogrons to maintain order, the Daleks are now the masters of Earth.

As the Doctor desperately works to discover what has happened to put history off-track, the Daleks plan a time-jump attack on the 20th century.

This novel is based on a Doctor Who story which was originally broadcast from 1 to 22 January 1972.

Featuring the Third Doctor as played by Jon Pertwee, with his companion Jo Grant and the UNIT organisation commanded by Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart

Reviews

Singer is a writer of far greater than ordinary power

—— The New York Times

A fine story of life and love, innocence and evil ... Singer is a master storyteller

—— Chicago Tribune Book World

Genius!

—— Anthony Horowitz

Magnificent ... unsurpassable ... told with grace and elegance ... exerts a hypnotic sway over the reader ... something of a Greek tragedy and of the splendid thriller ... All the details have such persuasive force that they remain indelibly recorded in the memory of the reader

—— Mario Vargas Llosa

By the time I got to the last page of Binet's masterpiece, I had to close my eyes and rethink history. I'm rethinking it still

—— Gary Shteyngart

Laurent Binet has given a new dimension to the non-fiction novel by weaving his writerly anxieties about the genre into the narrative, but his story is no less compelling for that, and the climax is unforgettable

—— David Lodge

A wonderful, ambitious book, and a triumph of translation

—— Colum McCann

A suspenseful work of absolute originality

—— Claude Lanzmann, director of SHOAH

A genuine tour de force

—— L'Humanite

A great success ... a terrifying story ... a breathless thriller

—— La Provence

A master stroke

—— Le Figaro Magazine

HHhH is an astonishing book—absorbing, moving, for the agony and acuity with which its author engages the problem of making literary art from unbearable historical fact.

—— Wells Tower

Extraordinary first novel...a literary triumph...The book's final section, which recounts the assassination and subsequent manhunt in minute detail, is a masterpiece of tension, and its closing pages are extremely moving. Very few page-turners come as smart and original as this

—— Chris Power , The Times

Mindblowing...obsessed with the past but gleaming with radical innovation, it's urgent and new and terrifying and beautiful and pretty much the best thing that's happened in fiction for ages

—— Stuart Hammond , Dazed and Confused

Binet has created something fresh and original and at times funny (no easy task given the subject matter) making a historical tale which captures the imagination and is also an important read

—— Francesca Brown , Stylist

Utterly compelling and ruthlessly fascinating

—— Laurence Mackin , Irish Times

A thrilling story that also happens to be true, by a gifted young author... Binet manages it all with beautiful lucidity and...discreet storytelling mastery

—— James Lasdun , Guardian

Fresh, honest and exciting

—— Anthony Cummins , Spectator

Historial fiction for grown-ups

—— Robert McCrum , Observer

A gripping thriller and a moving testament to the heroes of the Czechoslovakian resistance. Their mission resets the path of history. Binet’s resets the path of the historical novel. He has a bright, bright future.

—— David Annand , Sunday Telegraph

Brilliant..

—— Sunday Times, Style

Thrilling.

—— Killian Fox , Observer

An engrossing literary experiment that still contains enough hard facts to function as a terrific yarn.

—— Andrzej Lukowski , Metro

Thrilling and engaging...Binet brilliantly builds the tension in the lead up to the assassination attempt, likewise the nerve-shredding aftermath of the incident.... Being so experimental yet so compelling as a writer is a real high-wire act, one only precious few authors have managed. Binet does it dazzlingly here, and I'm excited about what he's going to write next

—— Doug Johnstone , Big Issue

Mesmeric stuff; history brought to chilling, potent life

—— Leyla Sanai , Independent on Sunday

A literary tour de force

—— Alan Riding , Scotland on Sunday

Binet’s debut is a masterpiece of historical fiction… gripping read

—— Daily Telegraph

A nail-biting novel, a thorough work of history and, most successfully of all, an exercise in form: a story about the writing of a true story

—— Lucy Kellaway , Financial Times

Compelling

—— Barry Egan , The Sunday Independent

Binet's approach may be new, but his story-telling instincts are nicely old fashioned. Translator Sam Wood does justice to the lucid prose

—— Independent

Is it a novel about the Nazis? Or is it a memoir about a historian trying to write about the Nazis? Somehow, it’s both – and it’s brilliant

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

A triumph

—— Patrick Freyne , Irish Times

A must-read for people who have a real interest in the Third Reich … improbably entertaining and electrifyingly modern, a moving work

—— Royston Crow

With its slightly skewed perspective and the relative freshness of its approach, HHhH compels us once again to consider that this, surely, was humanity's lowest point: a war waged, not against those who thwarted Germany's territorial ambitions, but against all that was good and decent in the human soul. In so doing, it confounds those who would decry post-modernism as wilfully obscure, relativistic and lacking in conviction

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald

French newcomer Laurent Binet hits the ground running in the engrossing novel within a novel

—— Sunday Telegraph

A breezily charming novel, with a thrilling story that also happens to be true, by a gifted young author amusingly anguished over the question of how to tell it … In principle there's nothing not to like about Laurent Binet's acclaimed debut, and HHhH is certainly a thoroughly captivating performance

—— James Lasdun , Guardian

This book fully justifies the lavish praise adorning its author

—— Absolutely Chelsea

Dazzling... It's stunningly brilliant

—— Simon Shaw , Mail on Sunday

Stunning

—— Donal O’Donoghue , RTE Guide

Binet provides both context and impressive detail on the eventual assassination of Heydrich

—— Mark Perryman , Philosophy Footbal
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdbook.com All Rights Reserved