Author:Terrance Dicks,John Leeson

John Leeson stars in this exciting novelisation of a classic adventure for the Fourth Doctor - and the introduction of K9.
A mysterious cloud drifts menacingly through space, and the Doctor becomes infected with the Nucleus of a malignant Virus that threatens to destroy his mind. Meanwhile, on Titan, human slaves prepare the Hive from which the Virus will swarm out and infect the universe. In search of a cure, Leela takes the Doctor to the Bi-Al Foundation, where they make an incredible journey into the Doctor’s brain in an attempt to destroy the Nucleus.
Can the Doctor free himself from the Nucleus in time to reach Titan and destroy the Hive? Luckily he has help — in the strangely dog-like shape of a mobile computer called K9…
John Leeson, who was the Voice of K9 in the TV series, reads this unabridged novelisation of the 1977 television serial.
I am so thrilled by the BBC's production of my novel, The Hours, and - believe me - a novelist does not thrill easily
—— Michael CunninghamThis is a novelisation that needs to be experienced, better yet to be felt.
—— Phil Roberts in The Future of the ForceSlick and playful
—— Star Wars AficionadoThe book stands alone as its own work of art that simply can’t be compared (extensively) to the script from which it was derived
—— Dork Side of the ForceDefinitely recommended for fans and people who want more depth in the story
—— Star Wars Awakens‘Solo is easily one of my favorite Star Wars books of the year, and one of my favorite Star Wars movie novelizations period. Making a novelization exciting is always a tricky business because authors need to keep readers engaged with a story where they already know what’s coming. Solo pulls this off by adding just the right amount of extra detail to keep each scene fresh and interesting without veering too far from the original movie and turning this into a completely new story. I’d recommend picking up Solo: A Star Wars Story whether or not you enjoyed the movie earlier this year, because I think it will make you love it more either way.’
—— Geek MomShe gives a voice to the voiceless...The Silence of the Girls is a book that will be read in generations to come
—— Daily TelegraphAn impressive feat of literary revisionism that should be on the Man Booker longlist... This is a story about the very real cost of wars waged by men... Barker makes us re-think history
—— IndependentGiving voice to the voiceless, this is a gripping feat of imagination that succeeds in being relevant today
—— Woman and HomeThe most important novel based on The Iliad so far this century
—— Edith HallThe magic of Barker's book is that the resonance of giving silenced women a voice at the centre of the story is just as relevant today
—— Grazia[Pat Barker] is one of our finest modern chroniclers of war...this magisterial novel is both a timely exploration of power, misogyny and violence and an elegant counternarrative to one of literature's founding conflicts
—— The Guardian