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Doctor Who and the State of Decay
Doctor Who and the State of Decay
Mar 2, 2026 6:29 AM

Author:Terrance Dicks,John Leeson,Geoffrey Beevers

Doctor Who and the State of Decay

Geoffrey Beevers reads this exciting novelisation of a 1980 TV adventure featuring the Fourth Doctor, as played by Tom Baker. The Doctor, Romana and K9 - and a young stowaway called Adric - are trapped in the alternative universe of E-Space. Seeking help, the land on an unknown planet. There they find a nightmare world where oppressed peasants toil for the Lords who live in the Tower, and where all learning is forbidden: a society in a state of decay. What is the terrifying secret of the Three Who Rule? What monstrous creature stirs beneath the Tower, waking from its thousand year sleep? The Doctor discovers that the oldest and deadliest enemy of the Time Lords is about to spring into horrifying action. John Leeson provides the Voice of K9

Duration: 4 hours approx.

Reviews

This range of classic Target audiobooks continues to go from strength to strength…

—— Doctor Who Magazine

Beaufort is that rare thing, a novel of deep moral concern in which sympathetically drawn and beautifully realized characters are allowed to speak for themselves.

—— LA Times

This gripping first novel describes... a country increasingly weary of endless war and strained by differences between hawks and doves... By turns, it is tragic, funny, mordant, irate, shocking, and poignant.. A must read

—— Booklist, Starred Review

An important novel...This is a picture of war from a soldier's point of view. Its language is crude, the body count rises, and yet the tenderness of the bonds among the men is extraordinary

—— library Journal, Starred Review

scenarios unfold, funny, chilling and unrelenting ... Leshem never slackens his pace.

—— San Francisco Chronicle

An overnight literary sensation ... it brilliantly evokes the nature of war ... Beaufort is a comic, absurd and piercingly truthful story. This is an incredible debut novel

—— Manchester Evening News

An unusually engaged form of literary criticism ... Jacobson treats Shylock less as a product of Shakespeare's culture and imagination than as a real historical figure emblematic of Jewish experience

—— Anthony Cummins , Prospect

Supremely stylish, probing and unsettling… Jacobson's writing is virtuoso. He is a master of shifting tones, from the satirical to the serious. His prose has the sort of elastic precision you only get from a writer who is truly in command.

—— Irish Independent

A shrewd and powerful examination of what is means to be a father, a Jew and a merciful human being, this is another witty and thought-provoking tale from Jacobson.

—— Sebastian Shakespeare , Tatler

Howard Jacobson, the undisputed British master of black comedies featuring Jewish characters… [Shylock is My Name] is a provocative interrogation of Shakespeare’s play… [Written] with empathy and affection. Sharp-edged and bitterly funny verbal fencing matches between the two men, the modern and eternal versions of each other, are the engine of the novel, as they pursue the questions of what it means to call oneself a Jew, or to be called one by others.

—— Stephanie Merritt , Observer

Jacobson takes the play's themes - justice, revenge, mercy, Jews and Christians, Jew-hatred, fathers and daughters - and works away at them with dark humour and rare intelligence… This is Jacobson at his best. There is no funnier writer in English today.

—— David Herman , Jewish Chronicle

A bold retelling of The Merchant of Venice…subverts and enhances an appreciation of the original… There are passages…that have a wit and punch reminiscent of Roth at his best, rendering the mutually defining paranoias of Jews and Gentiles with merciless clarity.

—— James Lasdun , Guardian

Shylock is My Name is witty and astute.

—— Rosie Kinchen , The Sunday Times

A bracing read. It explores the meaning of Shakespeare’s play, uses its enduring relevance to examine the contemporary world and challenges us to interrogate our prejudices… Thought-provoking.

—— Max Liu , Independent on Sunday

I tend to resist modern versions of the classics. What is added to a great work in the rewriting? Do we need the argot of the 21st century because the original is now intimidatingly remote? However, reading Shylock Is My Name undid me, reminding me of the irrefutable otherness that still manifests itself. It is a moving, disturbing and compelling riposte to the blithe resolution offered in the urtext.

—— Louise Adler , Sydney Morning Herald

It's here, in [the] juicy, intemperate, wisecracking squabbles, that Jacobson really communicates with Shakespeare's play, teasing out the lacunae, quietly adjusting its emphases…and making startlingly creative use of the centuries-old playscript.

—— Telegraph

[Jacobson] has delivered with authority and style… offering witty twists to a play long experienced by many as a racial tragedy

—— The Washington Post

A fascinating and stimulating retelling of a familiar story.

—— Yvonne Bradbury , Jewish Telegraph

[Jacobson] is a deft satirist, a genuinely funny writer…a beautifully written and fascinating novel.

—— Joanna Kavenna , Literary Review

Darkly comic new novel… A gripping tale of love, death, art and a pound of flesh – as well as plastic surgery… Jacobson examines contemporary issues of Jewish identity with his sharp, biting, northern humour. He asks what it means to be a father, a Jew and a merciful human being in today’s modern world. He is the first author brave enough to take up the challenge of re-imagining the Bard’s most controversial tragedy, in a bid to tackle its much-debated tones of anti-Semitism.

—— Rebecca Wallersteiner , The Jewish News

This complex book challenges all assumptions, never shying away from controversy… For every bitter take on human shortcomings here decried, there is a counterbalancing acknowledgment of the grace inherent in human nature. The novel captures the essence of the original.

—— Christina Hunt Mahony , Irish Times

Howard Jacobson’s masterful retelling of The Merchant of Venice celebrates the play but speaks for itself about being Jewish… Jacobson [is] a skilful craftsman as well as an artist of rare individuality… He has written a comic novel which poses serious questions. He has been both inventive and faithful to Shakespeare. And as a bonus, he gives us a good many excellent Jewish jokes.

—— Allan Massie , The Scotsman

Jacobson preserves the sense of ambiguity and uncertainty…that gives Shakespeare’s play much of its unsettling force… [My Name is Shylock] is the product of deep thought, deep feeling, deep scholarship. But this book is never leaden or lenten. It is fresh, exuberant, funny, almost preposterously entertaining and engaging. It is also possessed of an irony, wit and restless addiction to exploring conflicting arguments that leaves you feeling enriched… Jacobson’s prose is…vibrant, inventive, precise, arresting and full of memorable cadences and elegant modulations… A stunning achievement.

—— Matthew Adams , The National

My Name is Shylock does ample justice to the legacy of Shakespeare’s classic story… Jacobson has proved that his command of the art of storytelling is worthy of renewed praise.

—— UK Press Syndication

Jacobson’s Mancunian Jewish voice (last seen to splendid effect in The Mighty Walzer) is rare enough. But when this voice is combined with high culture and rude comedy it is, despite its abject subject matter, utterly life-affirming.

—— Bryan Cheyette , The Times Literary Supplement

Compelling retelling.

—— Paul Levy , The Spectator

Expect …The kind of comic intelligence that has made his name

—— Sam Parker , Esquire

Set in a world of unimaginable wealth, football player celebrity, cosmetic surgery and reality TV, My Name Is Shylock does ample justice to the legacy of Shakespeare's classic story of honouring a debt with perhaps the ultimate sacrifice.

—— Roddy Brooks , The Northern Echo

The winner of the Man Booker Prize for The Finkler Question pulls off a neat trick in this almost perversely serious comic novel, creating a parallel world to Shakespeare's Venice in the wealthy, cultured Golden Triangle of Cheshire, and peopling it with parallel-ish characters...The author shows full power and ingenuity putting Strulovitch and Shylock in the same place and time.

—— Paul Levy , The Spectator

Explores the meaning of Shakespeare's play, uses its enduring relevance to examine the contemporary world and challenges us to interrogate our prejudices...Energetic, authentic and biting.

—— Independent

That Shylock should thus materialise for a present-day Jewish protagonist, and become...a confidant, an exemplar...an advisor is a brilliant conceit...a powerful reimagining and reinvention.

—— Adam Lively , The Sunday Times

Alive with humanity and fierce debate, the book offers a nice twist on that notorious pound of flesh.

—— Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday

Funny and dark by turns… A gripping tale of love, plastic surgery and that notorious pound of flesh… This warm, witty and brilliantly written book provides a challenging feast for the imagination.

—— Rebecca Wallersteiner , The Lady

A master of serious-minded comedy, Jacobson is one of the greats of his generation.

—— Culture Whisper

Brilliantly witty inventive.

—— Kate Saunders , Saga

A crackling dialectic on fatherhood, faith and what it means to be merciful… The echoes of Shakespeare’s story in Strulovitch’s are obvious…But the quips and the characters are pure Jacobson… It’s a treat.

—— Emma Hughes , The Tablet

Hilarious reimagining of Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice.

—— Esquire

Offering witty twists to a play long experienced by many as a racial tragedy.

—— Tova Reich , Washington Post

Affectionate retelling… At the heart of the novel is the profound question of whether obligation…should be tempered by mercy.

—— Giulia Miller , Jewish Quarterly

Even those familiar with that book will be surprised by the twists now composed by Jacobson, whose most idle words have purpose, as well as point… Clever mockery and racial self-depreciation give the novel its provocative brilliance… Jacobson pours the quality of mercy through a large strainer, but Shylock’s fortitude and unswerving tribal fidelity are offered as a kind of redemption, a way, if you like, of forgiving Shakespeare. And of sending you back to him, not only just to check

—— Mary leland , Irish Examiner

As characteristically ingenious, witty and dark as his musings on what it means to be Jewish.

—— Simon Shaw , Mail on Sunday

It hooks you into a great debate.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

I don’t think any other author writes as well about the experience of Jewishness and he manages to be serious but with that laconic humour.

—— Tony Robinson , Radio Times Christmas Gift Guide

An intelligent, funny and enjoyable novel.

—— Brad Davies , i, Book of the Year

For my favourite novel I’m choosing Shylock is my Name… It’s a dark, witty, provocative re-imagine of Shakespeare…seriously brilliant on many levels.

—— Bel Mooney , Daily Mail, Book of the Year

A marvellous meditation on the Cold War era and particularly the battles of conscience that besiege a man living under tyranny.

—— Richard Fitzpatrick , Irish Examiner

The tone is intimate and aphoristic, the paragraphs succinct.

—— David Gutman , Gramophone

A fascinating account of the life of Dimitri Shostakovich… Perceptive, symbolic… The Noise of Time is an essential read, and not only for musicians.

—— Classical Music

A finely-tuned masterpiece... Barnes' prose is supreme.

—— Western Morning News

An intimate portrait of a public intellectual living in a totalitarian atmosphere… Immersive… The Noise of Time presents a compelling story in engaging and original prose.

—— Conor O'Donovan , Headstuff

Kaleidoscopic portrait… Barnes deftly constructs a life history... A masterfully told story of survival. *****

—— Nick Shave , BBC Music Magazine

Beautifully composed.

—— Jenny Comita , W Magazine

Without a doubt, Barnes has succeeded the high expectations of the people who waited with bated breath for the release of The Noise of Time. In a work that feels both original and authentic, he encourages us to consider the importance of art, in whatever form, and the influence it can have on us all.

—— Beth Blakemore , Student Newspaper

Barnes at his best...a poignant fictional recreation of the artistic agonies of the composer Shostakovich.

—— Sunday Times

A very sensitive account of how art can be in conflict with naked political power.

—— Observer

A book I’d like to tuck myself away for a day to read. It’s short in length but by all accounts big on ideas and power.

—— Susie Dent , Radio Times Christmas Gift Guide

His Dmitri Shostakovich is completely believable.

—— Margaret MacMillan , New Statesman, Book of the Year

[A] brilliant study of the relationship between art and an oppressive regime… A compelling depiction of the country’s history and a richly imagined close-up of the artist.

—— Lady, Book of the Year

A poignant and thoughtful portrait of the persecuted artist.

—— Brad Davies , i, Book of the Year

[It is] elegant.

—— Duncan White , Daily Telegraph, Book of the Year

Another Brilliant reinvention by Barnes.

—— Daily Telegraph, Book of the Year #26

My favourite book of this year is The Noise of Time.

—— Margaret MacMillan , New Statesman, Book of the Year

His best for ages. It is gripping, outward-looking, generous with plot and atmosphere and far beyond the powers of McEwan, Amis, Ishiguro, Rushidie et al…. This book grabbed me by the nuts like nothing of his since Starting at the Sun.

—— Giles Coren , The Times, Book of the Year

[A] haunting novel on the agonies of Shostakovitch under Stalin and his successors… I recommended it to a friend who for years was one of the great reviewers at the Washington Post. His reply: “It’s an extraordinary book. It’s a book that makes me wish I were reviewing again.”

—— Alex Russell , Financial Times, Book of the Year

A mini-masterpiece.

—— Rebecca Rose , Financial Times, Book of the Year

An elegant portrait of Shostakovitch.

—— Ali Smith , Guardian, Book of the Year

Written with Barnes’ characteristic low-key elegance, the book becomes a meditation on artistic integrity and its limits in a brutal regime

—— Irish Independent, Book of the Year

An impressive narrative of personal integrity.

—— G. Van Der Zwaan , Times Higher Education, Book of the Year

As a portrait of the composer and his time this book is a complete success… The Noise of Time is also convincing in the details… A book in which a certain grim humour is never too far away.

—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian

[A] gem of a novel.

—— Mail on Sunday

A compelling read that combines sharp insights, lyrical passages and dramatic tension.

—— Lady

Black humour and retrospective anguish prevail in Julian Barnes’s latest novel.

—— Lara Enoch , Guardian

A beautifully told story, this is subtle and powerful.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

This small novel is an elegant and unflinching account of a life lived under extreme pressure, during Stalin’s Great Terror. Julian Barnes fleshes out the life of the composer Shostakovich whose life is under threat. A powerful story, well-crafted and beautifully written about the humanity and torments of a creative soul… An informative, thought provoking read.

—— Western Morning News

An immense emotional and intellectual punch.

—— Sunday Times
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