Author:Mike Tucker
On a lonely stretch of Welsh coastline a fisherman is killed by a hideous creature from beneath the waves. When the Doctor and Rose arrive, they discover a village where the children are plagued by nightmares, and the nights are ruled by monsters. The villagers suspect that ancient industrialist Nathanial Morton is to blame, but the Doctor has suspicions of his own.
Who are the ancient figures that sleep in the old priory? What are the monsters that prowl the woods after sunset? What is the light that glows in the disused lighthouse on Black Island? As the children's nightmares get worse, The Doctor and Rose discover an alien plot to resurrect an ancient evil...
Featuring the Tenth Doctor and Rose as played by David Tennant and Billie Piper in the hit Doctor Who series from BBC Television.
Superior… moving… memorable.
—— Daily MailTo engage so originally and compellingly with a story first told more than 3,000 years ago, is astonishing: her ambition is one thing, the fact that it is so completely achieved is, frankly, something else… Carson is, simply, one of the very best.
—— Sarah Crown , Guardian[Carson’s] work over the last three decades has the flux of tidal waters. Words deceptively simple become in context an exhilarating tsunami of images with a shift in typographical structure.
—— Hayden Murphy , Herald‘A true poet, in the sense that she makes the unfamiliar seem real, and the real seem fabulous.’
—— Richard Eyre, Start the WeekThe narrative poem plays delightfully with form, at times approaching stream of consciousness in the vivid interplay of memory and dialogue.
—— Financial TimesSome of the most arresting poetry I've read this year... Complex and beautiful.
—— Alex MacDonald , QuietusStrange, affecting and very exciting. I guarantee it will blow your mind.
—— Nick Harkaway , Female FirstI think she's maybe the greatest living writer.
—— Erza Furman , Line of Best FitTo say J is unlike any other novel Jacobson has written would be misleading: the same ferocious wit runs throughout… That said, comparisons do not do full justice to Jacobson’s achievement in what may well come to be seen as the dystopian British novel of its times.
—— John Burnside , GuardianA snarling, effervescent and ambitious philosophical work of fiction… Jacobson’s triumph is to craft a novel that is poignant as well as troubling.
—— James Kidd , IndependentJacobson once jokingly referred to himself as a Jewish Jane Austen. Here he reinvents himself as a Jewish Aldous Huxley – and displays mastery in the role.
—— Max Davidson , Mail on SundayJacobson has crafted an immersive, complex experience with care and guile.
—— Anthony Cummins , ObserverJ is a remarkable achievement: an affecting, unsettling – and yes, darkly amusing – novel.
—— Matthew Adams , NationalA provocatively dystopian novel that depicts a disturbingly nice world.
—— Sunday TimesSufficient testament to a writer who is…producing some of his most powerful work.
—— Irish IndependentA subtle, topical, thought-provoking and painfully uncomfortable novel.
—— John Sutherland , The TimesYou can’t help feeling that this is an important book, and it’s hugely compelling… Worthy of its status as a Booker long-listee.
—— Emma Herdman , UK Press SyndicationJacobson’s most significantly Jewish book and quite possibly his masterpiece.
—— StandpointThe persistent reader will be duly rewarded, as the denouement reveals a hidden logic and the book climaxes with a brilliant literary (and philosophical) coup.
—— Sunday Business PostContemporary literature is overloaded with millenarian visions of destroyed landscapes and societies in flames, but Jacobson has produced one that feels frighteningly new by turning the focus within: the ruins here are the ruins of language, imagination, love itself.
—— Tim Martin , Daily TelegraphThe savagery of his imagery and his conclusions are impossible to forget, and maybe even to deny.
—— HeraldConfounds expectations but confirms Jacobson’s reputation.
—— New StatesmanI loved this book. A compelling tale that is bound to be a hot contender for the Booker.
—— Rebecca Wallersteiner , LadyImpressive, disturbingly timely – a massive step aside and a noticeable step up from most of his other fiction.
—— Bharat Tandon , Times Literary SupplementA pivotal – and impressive change of direction for [Jacobson].
—— Gerald Isaaman , UK Press SyndicationSentence by sentence, he remains perhaps the best British author around.
—— James Walton , SpectatorThis is Jacobson at his provocative, surprising, brilliant best.
—— Kate Saunders , Saga MagazineThrilling written and the most ambitious work on the shortlist… Once you’ve worked out what’s going on, you’ll be gripped by its hints of an anti-Semitic armageddon.
—— Mail on SundayIt’s stark and daring.
—— Gaby Wood , TelegraphA brilliant conspiracy yarn examining the manipulation of collective memory.
—— Mail on SundayIt's not just the subject of this book that will shock Jacobson fans, its distinct narrative style also comes as a surprise. A pleasant one at that.
—— Dan Lewis , Travel GuideA dystopian vision, haunting and memorable
—— William Leith , Evening StandardIt’s a triumph of creative writing. I finished it and started it again
—— Philippa Gregory , Daily ExpressJacobson has written a subtle, topical, thought-provoking and painfully uncomfortable novel
—— John Sutherland , The Timeschilling and provocative, Jacobson is at the height of his powers here
—— HeraldTrue to life [as well as] being well-written.
—— Catherine Taylor, family solicitor , Latest HomesVery deft, urgent and morally plangent.
—— Lewis Jones , OldieImpeccably crafted.
—— Stephanie Cross , LadyThe Children Act is in part a tribute to the best of the legal profession and, as a wordsmith, his deep respect for the best of their prose… The book has some landmark McEwan features of skillfully created tension.
—— LancetHe offers the reader a masterful study of a mind devoted to fairness… The Children Act is also a fascinating, painstakingly researched look inside the judicial process… Conveyed in crisp prose, this attention to detail elevates the moral conundrums…beyond the sensationalism lesser authors might have pursued. It is, in all respects, a novel that is carefully judged.
—— Irish ExaminerIt explores the tension between cool-headed secularism and ardent belief. It is at times preposterous – and yet it has a magical readability and is slender enough to read in one intense, absorbing sitting.
—— Jason Cowley , New StatesmanIn typical McEwan style, The Children Act is unputdownable and hauntingly beautiful.
—— Sushmita Bose , Khaleej TimesThe Children Act is a…sophisticated exploration of how society treats children and how children’s welfare can be considered in the complex world in which we live, where issues about how children should be raised are not subject to consensus.
—— Carol Storer , Legal ActionIf you have any unanswered letters on your desk, McEwan’s latest will have you grabbing your pen pronto.
—— IndependentThe Children Act shows McEwan as a master of fiction who strives to teach us how to live.
—— Olivia Cole , GQ Magazine UKPowerful and moving.
—— Sir David Bell , Times Higher EducationTaut, sparing and effortless, this is another exquisitely wrought novel from the master of the novella.
—— Good Book GuideA subtly musical arrangement of urgently topical issues…it may be read at a sitting, but resonates for much longer.
—— Lewis Jones , SpectatorIt’s absorbing and, almost a novella, it doesn’t outstay its welcome.
—— Nick Bevan , Times Higher EducationDefinitely one of the best books I have read this year.
—— Natalie K. Watson , Church TimesThis is a wonderful read with sharp, crystalline prose and, together with a superb moral dilemma, this is a beautiful and moving story.
—— Bath ChronicleOffering a window into a compelling world of life or death dilemmas, this is told in prose as polished as you’d expect.
—— Daily MailThe book is bursting of beautiful writing. You’ll want to read it all over again.
—— Kirsty Brimelow , The TimesA story of human behavior told in a raw, uncluttered, unforgiving way.
—— Cambridge NewsRenowned author McEwan manages to surprise throughout this book, right to the last page.
—— Mayfair MagazineA story of human behavior told in a raw, uncluttered, unforgiving way – and we could all have done with another couple of hundred pages.
—— Cambridge MagazineMcEwan writes in taut, sparing and effortless prose.
—— Good Book GuideIan McEwan writes stories of exquisite precision and clarity. This one is ace.
—— William Leith , Evening StandardA page-turning novel
—— John Koski , Mail on SundayAs one has come to expect, McEwan sets up the moral issues with delicacy and precision.
—— John Sutherland , The TimesIan McEwan is at his most compelling with the story of Fiona Maye… Awesome
—— Marcus Field , IndependentA wonderfully readable and thought-provoking book
—— Kathryn Atkins , Bristol MagazineA short novel that will linger in your mind for a long time
—— Woman’s WeeklyAnother beautifully written masterpiece
—— Beyondrelevant, emotive, moving, this is beautifully written and a guaranteed page turner
—— Matthew Smith , H EditionOne of our best authors at his best.
—— Murray Neil , Hertfordshire LifeOne of my favourite authors… McEwan’s fascination with judicial issues, with music and poetry, and with the moral conundrum of how far you place your religious beliefs above the life of someone you love, all feature in this book which will leave you thinking long after you have finished it.
—— Frances Colville , Frost MagazineIt's an enjoyable and often surprising novella.
—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily ExpressIt asks fundamental questions in a sober, intelligent way about the choices we make and our blindness when it comes to our beliefs.
—— Francois Ozon, film-maker , ObserverHere he is again: vulnerable, insightful, passionate and utterly in control. He’s amazing.
—— Robert Webb , Mail on Sunday