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Doctor Who: The English Way of Death
Doctor Who: The English Way of Death
Sep 12, 2025 10:53 AM

Author:Gareth Roberts

Doctor Who: The English Way of Death

The Doctor, Romana and K-9 are hoping for a holiday in London in the sweltering summer of 1930. But the TARDIS is warning of time pollution. And that’s not the only problem.

What connects the isolated Sussex resort of Nutchurch with the secret society run by the eccentric Percy Closed? Why has millionaire Hepworth Stackhouse dismissed his staff and hired assassin Julia Orlostro? And what is the truth behind the infernal vapour known only as Zodaal?

With the heat building, the Doctor and his friends set out to solve the mysteries.

An adventure set in 1930s London, featuring the Fourth Doctor as played by Tom Baker and his companions Romana and K-9.

Reviews

If you love cooking, and words…this book, given half a chance, will soon be engraved on your heart.

—— Rachel Cooke , Observer

This is a stunning collection of poems about the rites, rituals and adventures of cooking. Just like the best dishes, everything combines wonderfully to produce subtle tastes and thoughts which linger in the mind after the book has been closed. A delicious treat.

—— Bath Chronicle

Wonderful, original and sustaining poems.

—— Kate Kellaway , Observer

He is a marvellous poet, a man who knows his artichokes.

—— Kate Kellaway , Observer

There are moments of real tenderness, and real strangeness too, as Will gradually embraces risk and seeks friendship. It feels less part of some sub-genre cooked up by the marketing department than a contribution to a real, archetypal literary tradition, that of the coming-of-age story.

—— Spectator

If I Fall, If I Die is an expertly crafted work of great heart and sensitivity. I can’t recall a truer or more beautiful debut.

—— Patrick deWitt, author of The Sisters Brothers

A bruiser of a tale, one you will feel in your shins and your solar plexus. Michael Christie is a virtuosic prose stylist and boy is he so very wise and so funny on families and friendships, fear and joy, and the physics of sky and pavement. If I Fall, If I Die is a death-defying coming of age story; it’s also as weird and as convincing a love story as I have ever read. And so beautifully told that you’ll want to pass it on immediately.

—— Karen Russell, author of Swamplandia!

A lyrically descriptive tale with an endearing young protagonist

—— Choice magazine

Beautiful … [a] wonderful, quirky, eccentric book full of wit and spectacular prose. If you are looking for a unique read which you can immerse yourself in, with stimulating language and characters to latch on to and love, then If I Fall, If I Die needs to be your next book purchase. A book that I will go back to and read again and a stunning first novel from Michael Christie. A wonderful treasure of a book.

—— Duffythewriter

The reader alternates between knowing more than the characters and searching to unravel the mystery, with creative prose and incremental pay-offs, the 300 pages of Christie’s captivating debut novel fly by

—— Press Association syndicated review

This is a harrowing, but gripping love story

—— Good Book Guide

Wonderfully enticing.

—— Lucian Robinson , Literary Review

Individual scenes are often gripping, shocking or moving.

—— John Harding , Daily Mail

The bloody horrors of conflict are captured with visceral aplomb in this fine, minimalist novel.

—— i

Some of the most vividly evoked battle scenes I've read – he doesn't shy away from taking risks … chilling and touching all at the same time.

—— John Preston , Evening Standard

Foulds has the literary intelligence to turn the commonplace on its head.

—— Alberto Manguel , Guardian

A high-class thriller … Foulds has a literary novelist's feel for [Sicily's] harsh beauty.

—— Mail on Sunday

Foulds’ prose is superb… It reads like Catch-22 written by Evelyn Waugh.

—— Good Book Guide

It’s an ambitious book and the writer relates his story with poetic precision

—— i (The paper for today)

Told in a language that is both lyrical and stark The Tusk that Did the Damage should win Tania James praise and laurels from those readers who long for a more penetrating look at environmental issues and the moral questions which accompany them’.

—— Joe Phelan , Bookmunch
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