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Doctor Who: The Witchfinders
Doctor Who: The Witchfinders
Nov 16, 2025 1:50 AM

Author:Joy Wilkinson,Sophie Aldred

Doctor Who: The Witchfinders

Sophie Aldred reads this brand new novelisation of a thrilling screen adventure for the Thirteenth Doctor.

'I am an expert on witchcraft, Doctor, but I wish to learn more. Before you die, I want answers.'

The TARDIS lands in the Lancashire village of Bilehurst Cragg in the 17th Century, and the Doctor, Ryan, Graham and Yaz soon become embroiled in a witch trial run by the local landowner. Fear stalks the land, and the arrival of King James I only serves to intensify the witch hunt.

But the Doctor soon realises there is something more sinister than paranoia and superstition at work. Tendrils of living mud stir in the ground, and the dead lurch back to horrifying life as an evil alien presence begins to revive.

The Doctor and her friends must save not only the people of Bilehurst Cragg from the wakening forces, but the entire world.

Sophie Aldred, who played Ace in the BBC TV series, reads Joy Wilkinson's novelisation of her own 2018 TV script.

(P) 2021 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd

Reading produced by Neil Gardner

Sound design by David Roocroft

Executive producer: Michael Stevens

Reviews

A compelling drama of transatlantic Irish life

—— Billy Collins

Marries a deliciously old-fashioned style of storytelling with a fresh take on the immigrant experience . . . A warm, involving family drama

—— Booklist

An epic story about immigration, identity and family . . . Keane portrays the complex and, at times, challenging lives of these working-class women with tenderness and compassion

—— Guardian

Atmospheric, moving and brilliantly well-written

—— Daily Mail

This atmospheric read that spans from 1950s Ireland to modern-day America and follows the fortunes of a woman on the run from a family secret

—— Good Housekeeping

Engrossing . . . Captures the windswept grittiness of Irish poverty as vividly as the technicolour hustle and bustle of 1960s New York. The Walking People is the kind of novel you simply don't want to end

—— Daily Express

Keane's previous novel Ask Again, Yes, was on my best Books of 2019, and this is just as good. Its slow, melodic pace proves we don't always need fast action and twists. Set between Ireland and new York, it's about two sisters; one craves adventure, the other, family; both have secrets

—— Prima, 'Best Books of March'

An American dream story, told over decades, taking its reader from rural 1915 Ireland to the streets of New York and back again

—— Mariella Frostrup , Times Radio

A beautifully crafted novel about love, loyalty, culture, family and identity

—— Irish Sunday Independent

A moving and sweeping story that takes readers from the west coast of Ireland to America, following a family of immigrants across the different decades

—— Culturefly

I was a big fan of Ask Again, Yes and this is every bit as good

—— Good Housekeeping

An epic yarn . . . an evocative portrait of the immigrant, but also adds greater subtlety to this theme of belonging

—— RTE Guide

The story becomes so engrossing it grows on you with its real and engaging characters ... the divide between urban USA and rural Ireland is brilliantly grasped ... a very moving and original love story

—— Irish Examiner

Praise for Ask Again, Yes

—— -

The new Little Fires Everywhere

—— Stylist

One of the most exceptional novels of the summer . . . Has the makings of a future classic.

—— Sunday Express

A beautiful novel, bursting at the seams with empathy

—— Elle

Absolutely brilliant, a must read for our time

—— Lisa Taddeo, author of Three Women

I'll read everything she writes

—— Liane Moriarty

Powerful and moving . . . Mary Beth Keane is a writer of extraordinary depth, feeling and wit. Readers will love this book, as I did

—— Meg Wolitzer, author of The Female Persuasion

Immersive and deeply moving

—— Anna Hope, author of Expectation

A pleasantly accessible novel that will be popular with book clubs . . . Keane is a nuanced observer

—— Sunday Times

A stunning book.

—— Sarah Carson , i

Nolan's narrator rips and picks at the threads and scabs of desire, hedonism and self-worth... in this searing first novel, Nolan is holding up a fantastically intense mirror to her protagonist and letting us make up our own mind about whether or not we will look away.

—— Tara Joshi , Quietus

There are flashes of brilliance throughout, reminiscent of John Berger.

—— Stephanie Sy-Quia , Times Literary Supplement

Acts of Desperation creates an immersive experience of toxic romance through a suffocating and addictive narrative.

—— New Statesman

Painful, sharp and absorbing.

—— Susie Mesure , i

A reflection on compulsion, addiction and what it's like to exist as a young woman in a world that is hostile to you. Read the first page and you won't be able to stop.

—— Irish Times

Nolan...stakes out thrilling new territory in an intense, unflinching novel that is always intelligent and utterly unafraid of ugliness.

—— Claire Lowdon , Spectator, *Books of the Year*

A devastating stripping back of the gendered and politicised conditions that shape desire, a revelation of the unnerving ways we are made vulnerable to others in unequal systems. Its crisp, knowing prose is unparalleled, its anger remarkable.

—— Anahit Behrooz , Skinny, *Books of the Year*

Nolan's intelligent, elegant first novel, a gripping portrait of love turned toxic.

—— Daily Telegraph

The star feature of Nolan's narration is her ability to cut through received ideas about women, relationships and even rape. Her headlong, fearless prose, feels like salt wind on cracked lips. You wince and you thrill.

—— Claire Lowdon , Sunday Times

A raw read of vulnerability, desperation, and most definitely a new voice in fiction

—— Chloe Brown , Cosmopolitan

A thrilling read...if you want a visceral, honest, unputdownable summer read then this is it. You'll devour it in a day.

—— Stylist, *Summer Reads of 2022*

A very elegant novel, with coercive control at the core. She has such a strong voice and not a sentence is extraneous

—— Emma Frost, author of BUSY BEING FREE , i

I read this in one go... I found it raw, honest, brutal and real.

—— Lykke Li , Observer

Written with acerbic style and wit, this is an intoxicatingly good look at romantic obsession, delusion and desire.

—— i

Beautifully written…and the short chapters keep things moving at an addictively fast pace. Most importantly, it’s shamelessly real

—— Crack
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