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Doctor Who and the Revenge of the Cybermen
Doctor Who and the Revenge of the Cybermen
Mar 30, 2026 8:55 AM

Author:Terrance Dicks,Nicholas Briggs

Doctor Who and the Revenge of the Cybermen

Nicholas Briggs reads this exciting novelisation of a classic TV adventure for the Fourth Doctor.

A mysterious plague strikes Space Beacon Nerva, killing its victims within minutes. When the Doctor lands, only four humans remain alive. One of these seems to be in league with the nearby planet of gold, Voga...

Or is he in fact working for the dreaded Cybermen, who are now determined to finally destroy their old enemies, the Vogans?

The Doctor, Sarah and Harry find themselves trapped in the midst of a terrifying struggle to the death - between the ruthless, power-hungry Cybermen and the desperate, determined Vogans.

Nicholas Briggs, who voices the Cybermen in the hit BBC TV series, reads Terrance Dicks's 1976 novelisation of a TV serial by Gerry Davis.

(P) 2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd © 2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd

Reviews

'As mad as ever - and very funny'

—— Daily Mail

In vigorous, direct prose Garthwaite grippingly resurrects a remarkable woman

—— Sunday Times

Utterly compelling, this brilliant novel shines a light into a dark corner of our history and reclaims the voice and story of a powerful and forgotten woman. A phenomenal read. I loved it

—— Liz Hyder, author of The Gifts

Has the new Hilary Mantel arrived?

—— Sunday Telegraph

I look forward to hearing more from Annie Garthwaite and Cecily

—— Times

Cecily is a vivid and compelling portrait of a formidable figure from the 15th century and a heroine for our times

—— Big Issue

In Garthwaite's hands, Neville proves as Machiavellian, manipulative and era-defining as any man

—— Noon

Cecily stalks the corridors of power like a female Thomas Cromwell. A vividly female perspective on the Wars of the Roses - what a feat

—— Imogen Hermes Gowar

An extraordinary achievement . . . I could touch and breathe Cecily's world as if I was walking in her shadow

—— Carol McGrath

CECILY is the WOLF HALL for the 2020s... marks the start of a stellar career

—— Manda Scott

I loved it . . . Annie Garthwaite writes about the past with a kind of restrained, earthy vim, and with the sort of intimacy and immediacy - and empathy - that can only come from graft and craft

—— Toby Clements

This sort of poetry fills the hole in our culture left by preaching. It's topical... Shire speaks of racism, misogyny and life as a refugee... Her imagery is striking

—— Sunday Times

Bless the Daughter Raised by a Voice in Her Head is full of ferocious love and truth. It is not overstatement to say Shire writes the way Nina Simone sang

—— Terrance Hayes, author of National Book Award finalist, American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin

Heartbreaking, full-bodied, and luscious. Although they encompass complex themes, the poems are lucid and utterly magically alive, it's almost like the book is a person!

—— Pascale Petit

Warsan Shire is an expert sculptor. She molds words into clay, her poems into statues-each one a wonder that I return to, in reverence. Because in every line, every curve is an invitation to see differently what has been deemed ugly or difficult. This book is the art gallery I've yearned to visit

—— Vivek Shraya, author of I’m Afraid of Men

Read these candid and revelatory poems to wrap your arms tight around the certainty of your own fracture, to acknowledge the many places and many ways your body has succumbed to violation and only fitfully healed. Read them to know your whole muscled self as a vessel for grief, and to bask in the stuttered lyric of its story. Beauty is maddeningly elusive, but it does exist. It's here in these lines, bursting brilliant, reshaping the story

—— Patricia Smith, author of Incendiary Art

Her poems are alchemical; I promise if you read a poem of hers you might levitate, at the very least you will be changed

—— Ella Baxter , The Millions

Shire's electrifying poems have the resonance of instant classics... Shire raises up in dignity the lives of immigrants, mothers and daughters, Black women and teenage girls... This is poetry that has the power to create empathy, a quality which often seems lacking in these turbulent times

—— Caroline Sanderson , Bookseller

A very contemporary mix of deep tenderness and caustic humour

—— New Statesman, *Books of the Year*

A celebration of Black womanhood, joy, diaspora and beyond.

—— Stylist, *Christmas Gift Guide 2022*

With many of its poems famous in wider culture, it delivers an emotional intensity no less captivating for being familiar

—— Guardian, *Books of the Year*

This collection is a gut-punching series of poems that has haunted me ever since I first read it. I am so excited to see what Warsan Shire does next

—— Student Newspaper

[A] stunning debut collection... her words speak to women's experiences worldwide

—— Bernadine Evaristo, author of GIRL, WOMAN, OTHER , Guardian
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