Author:Gary Russell

Wilfred Mott is very happy: his granddaughter, Donna, is back home, catching up with family and gossiping about her journeys, and he has just discovered a new star and had it named after him. He takes the Tenth Doctor with him to the naming ceremony. But the Doctor soon discovers something else new, and worryingly bright, in the heavens – something that is heading for Earth. It’s an ancient force from the Dark Times. And it is very, very angry…
An adventure featuring the Tenth Doctor as played by David Tennant and his companion Donna
Equal parts Resident Evil and Hunger Games - and just as thrilling The Farm is a gripping dystopian tale that pits humans against humans in the race for survival in her remarkable and haunting world. McKay has spun a web of vampires, love, sacrifice, and survival readers won't want to escape. I can't wait to sink my teeth into the next installment!
—— Chloe NeillThere's a warmth and generosity of spirit that pervades the book and the characters and setting are well-drawn and involving.
—— Choice, Paperback Book of the Month, Nov 2010An extraordinary work of timely and provocative themes . . . [Eggers is] a writer of the highest order
—— San Francisco ChronicleA spare but moving elegy for the American century
—— Publishers WeeklyEvocative, dramatic and intense, this beautifully written - at times dark - tale brings a refreshing twist to this key historical time
—— Candis MagazineI loved The Flower Reader. A magical and thrilling tale, set in the court of one of history's most beguiling queens, it has the pace and intrigue of a CJ Sansom mystery and the sensuous passon of Philippa Gregory's Tudor romances. A story of love and murder that has all the dark enchantment and dangerous beauty of deadly nightshade.
—— Fiona Mountain, author of CAVALIER QUEENLoupas channels Philippa Gregory with this 16th-century historical romance.
—— Sunday HeraldThere is no one to match [Forster] for the way her assured,subtle and careful prose can detail the insecurities, torments and problems of what are, to all surface appearances, just nondescript, unremarkable and often half-lived lives
—— The LadyMargaret Forster has a deft and idiosyncratic touch
—— Penelope Lively , SpectatorA story which becomes steadily more gripping
—— WI MagazineA brilliantly uncomfortable read about the art of forgetfulness
—— Emma Hagestadt , IndependentBrilliant... You won't put this book down until its emotional end
—— Siraj Patel , Daily Express






