Author:Terrance Dicks,William Russell,Peter Purves,Jean Marsh,Nicholas Briggs,Jon Culshaw

Five thrilling adventures featuring the Doctor and his arch-enemies the Daleks!
In Doctor Who and the Dalek Invasion of Earth the TARDIS lands in the 21st Century to find a ravaged London at the mercy of familiar foes.
In Doctor Who: Daleks - Mission to the Unknown and Doctor Who: Daleks - The Mutation of Time conquest of the Universe seems assured for Mavic Chen and his allies, the Daleks.
In Doctor Who: Death to the Daleks the Doctor and Sarah are drawn to the planet Exillon, shortly before the Daleks arrive.
In Doctor Who and the Genesis of the Daleks, the Time Lords send the Doctor, Sarah and Harry on a dangerous mission to avert the creation of the Daleks once and for all.
Read by William Russell, Peter Purves, Jean Marsh and Jon Culshaw, with Dalek voices supplied by Nicholas Briggs, these classic Target Books novelisations are written by Terrance Dicks and John Peel.
(P) 2020 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd © 2020 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd
Slick and polished...immersive productions of much-loved novelisations...long may we enjoy them.
—— Doctor Who MagazineAn adept storyteller with a sharp eye for social nuances and a pleasing affection for her characters
—— Sunday TimesA powerful story of love and jealousy
—— Sunday TelegraphCompulsive reading... Ms Binchy has the true story-teller's knack
—— ObserverSupper Club is SO GREAT. Utterly perfect on loneliness, isolation, friendship, love, appetite, body image. It's about millennial women but I'm reading and nodding: 'Whole Mood'
—— Marian KeyesPowerful and original, insightful and moving... The voice feels akin to Sally Rooney's: colloquial, precise, at once uneasy about its place in the world and determined to stand up for itself... Williams suggests convincingly that cooking is as rigorous and complex as any art form
—— GuardianLike Fight Club but with food... About rebellion and power and all the desires women have suppressed for so, so long
—— BustleSupper Club will speak to parts of you that you didn't know were yearning. A thought-provoking read that will make you hungry for more
—— Refinery29A smart, zeitgeisty, genuinely affecting coming-of-age-tale... Lara Williams is very much a talent in her own right
—— Daily MailFor reading while eating in the bath and licking your lips... There's no other book to read this month
—— Lit HubTotally invigorating... With elements of Stephanie Danler's Sweetbitter, Ottessa Moshfegh's My Year of Rest and Relaxation and Phoebe Waller Bridge's Fleabag, Supper Club is a succulent, unapologetic celebration of female friendship, female rage, and female appetite
—— Pure Wow[A] delicious first novel... Williams writes with warmth, wit, and wisdom, serving up distinctive characters and a delectably unusual story. Supper Club will satisfy your craving for terrific writing and leave you hungry for more from this talented writer
—— Kirkus (Starred Review)A darkly funny coming-of-age story like no other... Supper Club is the ravenous read we all need
—— Read It ForwardA bacchanalian debut novel (that) will leaving you panting and ravenous
—— New York MagazineExtremely well done... Williams's enthusiasm for good food is attractive, and she writes with a pleasingly fluent style
—— Evening StandardDarkly delicious... A celebration of female power and friendship with wonderful food writing
—— Sunday MirrorEngrossing, humorous and candid, this exploration of a woman on the verge of finding herself makes for an enthralling novel
—— Publishers Weekly (STARRED REVIEW)An homage to female rage and the bonds of friendship, Supper Club will entice readers like a gourmet feast and leave them just as satisfied
—— Library JournalWilliams explores the complex relationship many women have with their deepest desires
—— Time (Summer Reading Highlights)A bacchanalian homage to women's rage and female friendship
—— Courtney Maum, author of 'I Am Having So Much Fun Here Without You'You'll want to feast on this book
—— CosmopolitanA love letter to those friends, both retained and lost, who have an irrevocable influence on who we are and how we understand ourselves. It's a powerful interrogation of the current status of women within western societies. But it is also a provocation to demand more, a challenge to hold each other to account, and an enticement to celebrate the vibrancy of women's lives with the raucous abandon they deserve. It's the counter fairy tale: biting the apple brought wisdom and confidence, not a loss of consciousness. No prince necessary
—— Women’s Review of BooksRebellious and subversive... Williams excels at visceral descriptions of bodies and food alike
—— Mail on SundayA bold and fresh story about food, friendship and feminism...compelling reading.
—— iBold, wild and witty
—— The Sunday ExpressA small utopia celebrating the intoxications of female friendship and standing as a private bulwark against patriarchy
—— TIME MagazineA meditation on life, death and the stories told about both.
—— UK Press SyndicationThe fiction about fiction that takes the breath away… Quichotte expertly does it again.
—— Michael Wood , London Review of BooksFunny and touching and sad and oddly vulnerable, rather like its eponymous hero… [Quichotte is] compelling.
—— Lucasta Miller , SpectatorRushdie is a master storyteller who weaves his fictions and characters into such agreeable tapestries.
—— Sarah Hayes , TabletThe novel's dazzling virtuosity and cascade of cultural references culminate in a final moving moment of hope
—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail






