Author:Terrance Dicks,Anneke Wills

Anneke Wills reads this exciting novelisation of a classic First Doctor TV adventure set in Cornwall.
On the 17th Century Cornish coast, villainous pirates roam the seas searching for treasure, while the townspeople have turned to smuggling, wheeling and dealing in contraband.
The TARDIS materialises in this wild and remote place, and the Doctor and his new companions, Ben and Polly, find themselves caught up in the dubious activities of the locals.
When the Doctor is unwittingly given a clue to the whereabouts of the treasure, the pirates are determined to extract the information - whatever the cost...
Anneke Wills, who played Polly in the BBC TV series, reads Terrance Dicks's complete and unabridged novelisation of a 1966 TV serial by Brian Hayles, first published by Target Books in 1988.
"This range of classic Target audiobooks continues to go from strength to strength..." Doctor Who Magazine
(P) 2020 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd
© 2020 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd Text
© Terrance Dicks 1988
Cover illustration (1987/2019) by Alister Pearson
Composite image by David Lavelle
Reading produced by Lizzie Davies
Recorded at Chatterbox Audio
Slick and polished...immersive productions of much-loved novelisations...long may we enjoy them.
—— Doctor Who MagazineIt casts a spell . . . fiction like Lovecraft's can be brutally hypnotic
—— New York Review of BooksI love you, SIMON. I LOVE YOU! And I love this fresh, funny, live-out-loud book.
—— Jennifer Niven, bestselling author of All the Bright Places, on Simon vsI have such a crush on this book! Not only is this onea must read, but it's a must re-read.
—— Julie Murphy, New York Times bestselling author of Dumplin'Heart-fluttering, honest, and hilarious. I can't stop hugging this book.
—— Stephanie Perkins, New York Times bestselling author of Anna and the French KissA brilliant debut
—— Pandora Sykes , The High Low PodcastEach voice in this quartet cuts through the pages so cleanly and clearly that the overall effect is one of dangerously glittering harmony. The tale told here is as engrossing as a war chant, or a mosaic formed with blades, every piece a memento sharpened on those unyielding barriers between us and our ideal lives.
—— Helen Oyeyemi, award-winning author of GINGERBREADIf I Had Your Face is hilarious, cuttingly observant, feminist, and all-around delightful. It is hard to write a book about four protagonists and make you care for all of them-yet somehow Cha succeeds.
—— Rowan Hisayo Buchanan, Costa-shortlisted author of 'Starling Days'One of the buzziest debuts of the year, If I Had Your Face transports readers to glittering, futuristic Seoul. Essential reading in what Jia Tolentino memorably called the age of Instagram face.
—— VogueCompelling, understated, casually brutal, and very cynical. I love it.
—— Hanna Jameson, bestselling author of 'The Last'Troubling, kaleidoscopic, and hugely enjoyable
—— Nell Zink, author of THE WALLCREEPER, NICOTINE and MISLAIDIt's difficult to believe this is Frances Cha's first novel-she's a masterful storyteller. I couldn't put IF I HAD YOUR FACE down; I was riveted by the stories of four young women navigating life in the extreme, competitive environment of modern Seoul. I loved reading about a world I knew nothing about, and from the first page, it was clear Cha was the best possible guide. I highly recommend this novel.
—— Ann Napolitano, author of DEAR EDWARDWonderful... unsettling and deeply affecting - the writing is beautifully spare, and captures with such clarity what it means for these four young women to be taught to hope for everything and yet continuously to receive nothing
—— Rosie Price, author of WHAT RED WASIf I Had Your Face is a vivid, eviscerating depiction of social realism in contemporary Seoul. Frances Cha renders gender and class struggles with forensic detail, in a luminous voice both knowledgeable and compelling.
—— Sharlene Teo, author of 'Ponti'I love the way Frances Cha rotates between mindsets to look at how beauty and privilege influence the way women live, whilst maintaining a sly lightness
—— Rebecca Watson, author of 'little scratch'Make way for Frances Cha, an entrancing new voice who guides us into the complexities and contradictions of modern-day Seoul... I devoured it in a single sitting, and so will you.
—— Janice Lee, NYT Bestselling Author of THE PIANO TEACHERI loved this book. It offers a fascinating window on a place and culture I knew little about, and yet from the first page it was intensely relatable - I recognised these women like friends, colleagues or sisters. Invigorating in its honesty and near-filmic in its descriptive power, If I Had Your Face is brilliantly-drawn tableau of the universalities of womanhood, the pressures we grapple with, and the way female bonds can carry us through.
—— Lauren Bravo, author of WHAT WOULD THE SPICE GIRLS DO?Cha's striking first novel follows four young women in Seoul, South Korea trapped in a sphere of impossible beauty standards
—— Oprah Magazine, Most Anticipated Books of 2020A story of four women in Seoul and the way that economic and social realities determine the paths available to them
—— The Millions, Most AnticipatedAn intimate, panoramic debut... An enthralling read from the very first page.
—— Ed Park, Author of PERSONAL DAYS and Hemingway Foundation / PEN Award FinalistA provoking, ultimately inspiring tale of women pushing back against oppressive customs both traditional and new . . . Frances Cha, like her quartet of narrators, has a rebel's heart
—— Jonathan Dee, author of THE LOCALSAn endearing story of female friendship staged against a backdrop of elitism, sexism and the relentless quest for cosmetic perfection... Enthralling
—— Vanity FairAn insightful, powerful story from a promising new voice
—— Publishers WeeklyCha's timely debut deftly explores the impact of impossible beauty standards and male-dominated family money on South Korean women
—— KirkusAn eye-opening story of female friendship set against the brutal beauty standards of south Korea
—— GlamourMesmerizing... weaves together the complexities and contradictions of modern-day Seoul, in an ultimately uplifting story of women living in defiance of oppressive customs
—— DazedA gripping tale at once unfamiliar and unmistakably universal
—— BookRiotA gripping portrait of four young women in South Korea... its focus on the tangled and complicated nature of female friendship is universally familiar and fascinating
—— Refinery 29Hypnotising... you won't want to put it down until the very last page
—— Harper's BazaarYou'll find sisterhood at the heart of this ambitious book
—— New York Times Book ReviewTremain's extraordinary imagination has produced a powerful, unsettling novel in which two worlds and cultures collide
—— Cath Kidson MagazineTremain writes about this part of France so well because she has known it since childhood, and she captures a sensuality in the landscape that is both attractive and eerie... It is an enthralling book about the catastrophic disruption honesty can bring
—— Siobhan Kane , Irish TimesThe novel has all the formal structure of a medieval morality tale, along with its traditional dichotomies: rus and urbe, avarice and asceticism, chastity and lust
—— GuardianRose Tremain's thrilling Trespass is set in an obsure valley in Southern France... To be read slowly; Tremain's writing is too exquisite to hurry
—— The TimesTimeless but rooted; tangible but otherworldly. Meticulously plotted, with the musty sadness that comes of cleaving to the past, Trespass will reward your reading time
—— Scotland on SundayRose Tremain's novel begins with a scream and barely loosens its grip amid the sumptuously written pages that follow...subtly harnesses the stifling heat and dangerously feral landscape of southern France to unspool a psychologically disconcerting story of family skeletons and outsider tensions
—— MetroLike a sinister edition of A Place In the Sun directed by Alfred Hitchcock, with the depth and subtlety that make the book far more than a mere thriller
—— You Magazine (Daily Mail)