Author:Nigel Robinson,Terrance Dicks,William Russell,Terry Molloy,Jon Culshaw,John Leeson,Matthew Waterhouse

Five classic novelisations of TV stories involving space travel and adventure.
In The Edge of Destruction the TARDIS stalls in space with the Doctor and friends trapped inside.
In The Space Pirates the travellers are embroiled in the schemes of interplanetary raiders.
In The Ark In Space the TARDIS arrives on a fully-automated space station and meet the Wirrn...
In The Invasion of Time the Doctor returns to Gallifrey and encounters old friends and enemies.
In Four To Doomsday the TARDIS crew meet Monarch, whose mission to Earth has a sinister purpose.
William Russell, Terry Molloy, Jon Culshaw, John Leeson and Matthew Waterhouse read these classic tales, first published as Target Books in the 1970s and 1980s.
(P) 2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd © 2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd
Slick and polished...immersive productions of much-loved novelisations...long may we enjoy them
—— Doctor Who MagazineThis weird and wonderful novel, about the price you pay for 'the one true note', is Laxness at his best: a reminder of the mad hilarity of the Icelandic sensibility. An endearing and unforgettable voice
—— Nicholas ShakespeareIt is a novel (a world) that transmits something of the wonder of life, its strangeness, its goodness, ocassions for stubbornness, and the stoicism of people - people everywhere
—— Murray BailLaxness's view of a child's bounded universe has humour and a light touch
—— GuardianA lyrical letter from the new India...a profoundly literary voice, as interested in how to write about a subject as the subject itself
—— GuardianTerrific . . . elegantly written, incisively observed, and deeply satisfying to read
—— Kamila ShamsieThis powerful novel is a searing examination of our recent cultural and political trajectory, a surprising meditation on the role of the writer in times such as ours, a fragile love story, and an unforgiving look at where we are headed. It is, in other words, a book that demands to be read and rewards reading
—— Mohsin HamidThe changing forms of his writing, always straining to encompass the chaotic reality Mishra sees around himself, reveal him to be a profoundly literary voice, as interested in how to write about a subject as the subject itself...After the density of his recent books, with their weighty bibliographies, Mishra's fictional prose is permitted, once again, to take lyrical flight
—— GuardianPankaj Mishra returns to fiction after two decades with a gripping and remarkable novel - his best work yet. It captures the trajectory of our time through insights and moments that are startling, pure, and have a strange inevitability
—— Amit ChaudhuriA profound, extraordinarily written, and devastating exploration of the ways the personal is always already the political. Unforgettable
—— Neel MukherjeePankaj Mishra writes with great intelligence and lyrical beauty about the perennial struggle for dignity and stability in a rapidly changing world - and how, in this process, identities are reinvented, reclaimed or renegotiated
—— Laila LalamiPankaj Mishra kept us waiting 20 years for a new novel, and it becomes apparent, as soon as you pick up Run and Hide, that time has honed one of our greatest writing talents. The narrative draws you in more keenly than any boxset and the prose shimmers with wisdom. Marvellous
—— Sathnam SangheraRun and Hide is achingly irresistible and terrifyingly bracing - like seeing yourself or your world, without illusion, for the first time. It is the coup de literature our demented age needs from one of the finest, bravest writers we have
—— Junot DiazI was left hoping I won't have to wait another 20 years for Mishra's next novel
—— i PaperRun and Hide, is an exciting follow-up to his 1999 debut, The Romantics . . . Mishra brings to bear both the high style of his fiction and the clarity of his criticism for an affecting, world-spanning story about capitalism, art, and globalization
—— Vulture, 49 Books We Can't Wait to Read in 2022Run and Hide is savage and tender, and shockingly spiritual. This book may not change your life but it'll entertain the hell out of you
—— Mohammed HanifThere is tragedy when a spurned and forsaken world turns out to be a paradise in disguise, and when it calls its children home, the children are too unmoored, too compromised to return. That is the monumental, ultra-modern drama Pankaj Mishra unfolds in Run and Hide, a novel of devastating loss and moral collapse worthy of Henry James
—— Joshua FerrisAn intense, probing novel examines rampant materialism and spiritual bankruptcy
—— Kirkus Starred ReviewMishra offers a deeply critical portrait of what he terms the 'IIT generation' of educated Indians who made their fortunes in a rapidly changing India and globalizing world and of the personal and social costs of those changes . . . A vivid, multifaceted study
—— Library JournalIndian author Pankaj Mishra has dedicated his career to analyzing the psychology of Asia's rising masses, particularly its young men. His latest work, a novel, Run and Hide, is his most searing look at the subject yet
—— The InterceptA beautifully written novel that captures the complexities and challenges of growing up in India and the simultaneous struggle to find meaning and a way forward in life
—— BooklistA well-written and engaging tale
—— Publishers AssociationThere is more than a whiff of The Great Gatsby . . . Mishra's satire recalls Tom Wolfe or Bret Easton Ellis
—— ProspectWhether writing about a Himalayan village or cosmopolitan London, Pankaj Mishra combines a powerful historical understanding of the contemporary world with psychological insight and a deep feeling for landscape. In Run and Hide, he has created an absolutely new kind of immigrant story-one in which achieving your wildest dreams might mean giving up everything, even once you return home
—— Nell FreudenbergerThere is an arresting contrast in style between the political writings on which [Mishra's] reputation is chiefly built and the more introspective mode on display in his memoir and fiction. Those weaned on the gripping velocity and adamantine syntax of Mishra's essays may be surprised by the assiduous lucidity and serene poise of his new novel Run and Hide
—— The New StatesmanMishra is a masterful eyewitness to the modern world, equally unafraid of nuance, earnestness and absurdity. [Run and Hide] is a slow, careful book about a fast and reckless world. This is not a destination novel; it is a journey novel. One well worth taking
—— San Francisco ChronicleMishra has a bit of Balzac in him-for instance, his belief that character reveals itself through surface detail, if that detail is observed ruthlessly enough . . . Run and Hide is a novel of modern India that takes some of the big-picture phenomena from Age of Anger and-as good social novels have always done-gets us to engage on the level of feeling by returning those abstractions to human scale
—— The New York Times Book ReviewMishra is a superb journalist, and the sensory vitality of his second novel is a reminder that fiction is the ultimate information compressor. Unleashed in the realm of human feeling, Mishra's keen observational powers are spectacularly alive
—— Jennifer EganChan's high-concept novel may toy with dystopia but it remains chillingly plausible, a portrait of our fanatical culture of judgement against women, and mothers in particular, taken to a grotesquely logical extreme
—— MetroA nail-biting explosive story exploring the pressures of 'perfect' parenting
—— Woman's Own MagazineThe writing is at times hilarious and scalpel sharp
—— Independent (Ireland)Part science fiction, part incarceration narrative and part Cultural Revolution memoir, it is as gripping as it is terrifying - and for mothers struggling to 'do the right thing', all too believable
—— Spiked OnlinePropulsive and provocative
—— Daily ExpressThe School For Good Mothers is a perceptive, prescient and daring debut that presents a dystopia that doesn't feel as far away as we'd like it to
—— CultureflyAn unforgettable an haunting story about the thoughts, opinions and choices you make
—— Woman's WeeklyReminiscent of The Handmaid's Tale, this eerie page-turner is a captivating depiction of a dystopian world that feels entirely possible. It's not only the gripping story of Frida's personal struggle, but also a thought-provoking work of commentary on American motherhood
—— TIMEI was fascinated and intrigued by this feminist dystopian novel
—— Daily MailSo brilliant and haunting and ahead of its time... the only book that has ever stopped me from sleeping
—— Jessie CaveA wonderful immersive experience
—— Daily MailA beautiful read - a real pageturner
—— Women's Hour, BBC Radio 4A delight to read, each page of Black Cake is more interesting than the last. Wilkerson weaves social history into the backbone of the story, in a way that's nothing short of masterful.
—— HeraldA resonant story of identity, family and the meaning of home
—— Mail on SundayA delight to read, each page of Black Cake is more interesting than the last. Wilkerson masterfully weaves social history into the backbone of the story
—— Press AssociationPrepare to be hooked
—— The HandbookImpressive
—— Evening StandardA rich story around immigration and identity ... the novel beautifully captures the struggles of family and identity and the liberation that comes from those struggles
—— Irish TImesEngrossing . . . Wilkerson's brilliant descriptions are positively sumptuous for the mind's eye
—— HeromagAn incredible family saga spanning 60 years, jumping across continents and time, forming a multi-layered book about secrets and inheritance
—— Guardian.comA delicious and gripping tale that sweeps the reader across decades and continents, turning everything the siblings think they know about themselves and their family on its head'
—— Jyoti Patel, GuardianLovable, funny. Doesn't disappoint
—— Sunday LifeKeyes at the peak of her powers
—— ScotsmanPraise for Marian Keyes
—— :Messy, tangled complex humans who reminded me that few of us ever really sort out our lives at all
—— Jojo MoyesA novel that is warm and witty but never afraid to tackle the big stuff
—— Elizabeth Day , Mail on SundayMagnificently messy lives, brilliantly untangled. Funny, tender and completely absorbing!
—— Graham NortonKeyes knows how to make serious issues relatable - and get a few grownup laughs, too
—— GuardianThere should be a word to describe the sadness and satisfaction you feel when you read the last page of a Marian Keyes novel: the ending is perfect but you still want more, more, more
—— Liane MoriartyCharming, funny and poignant. But also profound, heartbreaking
—— Nina StibbeKeyes at her best: capturing everyday voices with humour and empathy with writing that you'll devour in a weekend. Just pure and simple joy
—— StylistFunny, thought-provoking and will get you right in the feels
—— RedSensitive, funny, wonderful, immensely touching
—— Nigella LawsonMarian Keyes's gift for storytelling is utterly magnificent
—— Liz NugentRachel Walsh is back with a bang. Wickedly shrewd and fun
—— RTE Guide, 'Top 10 Fiction of 2022'






