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Doctor Who: The Shadow In The Glass
Doctor Who: The Shadow In The Glass
Sep 10, 2025 12:34 PM

Author:Justin Richards,Steve Cole

Doctor Who: The Shadow In The Glass

When a squadron of RAF Hurricanes shoots down an unidentified aircraft over Turelhampton, the village is immediately evacuated. But why is the village still guarded by troops in 2001? When a television documentary crew break through the cordon looking for a story, they find they've recorded more than they'd bargained for.

Caught up in both a deadly conspiracy and a historical mystery, retired Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart calls upon his old friend the Doctor. Half-glimpsed demons watch from the shadows as the Doctor and the Brigadier travel back in time to discover the last, and deadliest, secret of the Second World War.

An adventure set partly in the Second World War, featuring the Sixth Doctor as played by Colin Baker and Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart.

Reviews

Remarque died before he could complete The Promised Land, but the four hundred pages he produced, superbly translated by the redoubtable Michael Hofmann, are enough to tell a fascinating and poignant tale about identity, adaptability and the trials of starting afresh

—— Malcolm Forbes , Herald

The Promised Land has been both beautifully penned and thoughtfully translated… The Promised Land is a compulsively readable, and rather marvellous historical novel

—— Kirsty Hewitt , Nudge

Remarque is a craftsman of unquestionably first rank

—— New York Times Book Review

A moving and compelling story...thoughtful reflection on the inhumanity of warfare and the emigrant's predicament, deft characterisation, colourful accounts of life in New York during World War II...readers will readily engage with the rich detail and sympathetic portrayal

—— New Books in German

Adam Foulds is a young British novelist of striking talent and eclecticism. His style is first-rate, combining precision with a rich poetic imagination. He is able to do more with language, and at greater depth, than most other British novelists of his generation.

—— Andrew Holgate , Sunday Times

The pellucid elegance of Foulds’s fictional voice is entirely his own. He conjures with exhilarating assurance the sense of a postwar collapse of order so complete as to be almost voluptuous.

—— Jane Shilling , Prospect

Ambitious and diffuse... Foulds is a master of concision and clarity, and his prose is "poetic" in the best sense: never florid or rambling, each short sentence weighed and parcelled out.

—— Tom Gatti , New Statesman

The bleakness of Foulds’s message…is not reflected in the richness of the prose or characterisation of this deep, dark, demanding tale.

—— Lesley McDowell , Independent on Sunday

[Foulds] matches his flair for rhythm with a skilful ownership of both his prose and a complex narrative. All delivered with a minimalist restraint.

—— Will Dean , Independent

There's much to admire in this novel. Foulds has a searching eye for detail and an apparently helpless compulsion to wring imagery from his subject.

—— Tim Martin , Daily Telegraph

Foulds’s writing invites...returning to consider each layer of the composition...there is a prismatic quality to the language which allows various levels of interpretation to be separated out and refined.

—— Thea Lenarduzzi , Times Literary Supplement

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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