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Doctor Who: The Art of Destruction
Doctor Who: The Art of Destruction
Jan 18, 2025 9:51 AM

Author:Steve Cole

Doctor Who: The Art of Destruction

The TARDIS lands in 22nd century Africa in the shadow of a dormant volcano. Agri-teams are growing new foodstuffs in the baking soil to help feed the world's starving millions, but the Doctor and Rose have detected an alien signal somewhere close by. When a nightmare force starts surging along the dark volcanic tunnels, the Doctor realises an ancient trap has been sprung. But who was it meant for? And what is the secret of the eerie statues that stand at the heart of the volcano? Dragged into a centuries-old conflict, Rose and the Doctor are soon elevating survival to an art form as ancient, alien hands practice arts of destruction all around them.

Featuring the Tenth Doctor and Rose as played by David Tennant and Billie Piper in the hit Doctor Who series from BBC Television.

Reviews

I still feel that Alice Munro is mine. I am the perfect audience for her brand of quiet, seething feminism

—— Lena Dunham

Munro is so good that one gropes for superlatives

—— Daily Telegraph

Superb. Its dense weave of colour and texture offers manifold witty surprises and the poetry of place that is the hallmark of Munro’s stories

—— Steve Davies , Independent

In Munro's work, nothing can be predicted. Emotions erupt. Preconceptions crumble. Surprises proliferate

—— Margaret Atwood

Her prose is exact and unflinching, coolly anatomising vengeful grudges, dark crimes and curdled emotions

—— Guardian

The Nobel laureate’s mastery of the miniature is clear in this early portrait of small-town life

—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian

She is one of the handful of writers, some living, most dead, whom I have in mind when I say that fiction is my religion

—— Jonathan Franzen

She knows us better than we know ourselves. She always has

—— Washington Times

Reading Munro's cut-crystal prose is unadulterated pleasure

—— Daily Telegraph

A compelling portrait of the artist as a young girl

—— Maggie Doherty , The Times Literary Supplement

If you’ve not come across it before, grab a copy pronto

—— Valerie O’Riordan , Book Munch

This book shows Munro’s gift for finding the extraordinary in the everyday

—— Good Book Guide

An enriching and rewarding read

—— Cambridge News

In the simplest of words, and with the greatest of power, she makes us see and hear an ‘unremarkable’ scene we will never forget

—— Hermione Lee , New York Review of Books

A subtle portrait of a mother and daughter growing into one another.

—— Moya Crockett , Stylist

Toby Clements has provides ripping action we can be absorbed by and relate to; a talent that many more experienced authors have yet to grasp.

—— The Bookbag

Toby Clements has a rich knowledge of the history of the times and this is evident in his writing. His depictions of the way people lived their lives during this turbulent time in our history is so vivid you feel a definite sense of being there. …the most enjoyable historical novel I have read for some time.

—— Culture Fly

Without beginning, middle, end – and especially lacking centre! – the novel comes to a halt, leaving the reader in a gorgeous daze of symbol and cypher, whose meaning is so clear, and yet tantalizingly opaque.

—— Aisling O’Gara , Totally Dublin

Satin Island is clever, vogue, slick and sleek.

—— Tamim Sadikali , Book Munch

Packed with intriguing and intellectual ideas… refreshingly thought-provoking.

—— Good Book Guide

Slender, foxily postmodern.

—— Sam Leith , Radio Times

The bleeding edge of science fiction is Satin Island.

—— Interzone

In Satin Island the narrator, U, takes us on a journey through the modern world of ideas, theories and references. It’s a wonderfully intense experience – as soon as I’d finished I wanted to read it again.

—— Edith Bowman , Radio Times

Convincing proof that the best writers of our time are anthropologists.

—— Anna Aslanyan , The Spectator

Favourite novel of 2015.

—— John Banville , Observer

A darkly funny and disturbing meditation on the intricacies and insubstantiality of our technology-ridden times. McCarthy is one of the most daring, most ambitious and most subtle of what at my age I can all the younger generation of writers.

—— John Banville , Irish Times

The novel often reads like a dramatic monologue, a very modern stream of consciousness, akin to Joyce’s Finnegans Wake… McCarthy’s novel is innovative, well crafted and challenging… This novel is breaking new ground, a breath of fresh air, at times a tour de force.

—— Vincent Hanley , Irish Times

McCarthy has put his finger on something, and he’s nailed it very precisely. It’s how we live now. All the information we process every day. What it’s doing to us.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

As a debut novel, it is truly dazzling and Hermione Eyre has proved herself an author well worth watching out for

—— Susannah Perkins , Nudge

Profoundly moving

—— Country Life
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