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Doctor Who: The Anti-Hero (Time Trips)
Doctor Who: The Anti-Hero (Time Trips)
Nov 15, 2025 7:04 AM

Author:Stella Duffy

Doctor Who: The Anti-Hero (Time Trips)

Arriving at the ancient Musaeum of Alexandria, the Doctor is keen to explore. He might find some new recorder music, and Jamie might discover a new porridge recipe, while Zoe will love the antiquated ideas about astrophysics. But once inside, they all find rather more than they bargained for, and it soon becomes clear they may never leave the Museaum alive…

Reviews

Utterly compelling

—— Sunday Times

Hypnotically readable

—— Sunday Telegraph

Taut with narrative excitement and suspense

—— Sunday Times

A plot so engrossing that it seems reckless to pick the book up in the evening if you plan to get any sleep that night

—— A. S. Byatt , Daily Mail

He is the maestro at creating suspense

—— New Statesman

McEwan's exploration of his characters' lives and secret emotions is a virtuoso display of fictional subtlety and intelligence

—— Observer

A virtuoso display

—— Observer

[An] exquisite and suspenseful novel

—— Week

A page-turner, with a plot so engrossing that it seems reckless to pick the book up in the evening if you plan to get any sleep that night

—— A S Byatt , Daily Mail

Taut with narrative excitement and suspense...a novel of rich diversity that triumphantly integrates imagination and intelligence, rationality and emotional alertness

—— Sunday Times

He is the maestro at creating suspense: the particular, sickening, see-sawing kind that demands a kind of physical courage from the reader to continue reading

—— New Statesman

Deeply humane tale of memory, loss and the struggle to understand a family’s past… It’s a novel of generous warmth

—— Ben Felsenburg , Metro Herald

A beautiful, brilliant novel destined to cement Sue's place as one of the leading lights of the Scottish literary scene

—— Waterstones

Peebles' keen eye for social observation adds a comic touch to the narrative, expertly showing how black humour is used in bleak times.

—— Rowena McIntosh , The Skinny

Peebles writes poetic prose, capturing Aggie's imaginative character and her need to find meaning in the puzzle of circumstances she finds herself in. The insight into dementia and its impact upon a family is poignant, with Aggie desperate to recapture the history of a beloved Gran who is disappearing in front of her eyes. The novel strongly evokes the Scottish countryside, its link to the past and the secrets it keeps. The story may be a slow burner, but keep going because its gentle pace builds up to a satisfying conclusion

—— Penny Batchelor , We Love This Book

Aridjis tells an improbable tale with enough details to give it authenticity, and to make her genuinely creepy story something thoughtful and original

—— Lesley McDowell, 4 stars , Independent on Sunday

This is an incredibly atmospheric novel, seen through the eyes of Marie, a consummate outsider

—— Bath Chronicle

Aridjis is a fantastic new voice in fiction with a real gift for character and location

—— Bath Magazine

Set against London’s rain-soaked streets, it is an astute portrait of the alienation of urban life

—— Anna Savva, 4 stars , Lady

A beautiful tale examining the processes of life

—— Good Book Guide

Eschewing a conventional narrative, this absorbing novel deceptively contains a crackling energy within its understated, artful prose

—— Francesca Angelini , Sunday Times
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