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Doctor Who: Timelash
Doctor Who: Timelash
Feb 1, 2026 5:17 AM

Author:Glen McCoy,Colin Baker

Doctor Who: Timelash

Colin Baker reads this dynamic novelisation of a TV adventure featuring the Sixth Doctor and Peri.

The inhabitants of the planet Karfel are suffering under the tyrannical rule of their leader, the Borad, who has brought his world to the brink of interplanetary war.

Those who dare to oppose the will of the Borad are mercilessly sacrificed to the Timelash, a fate considered by many to be worse than death.

When the Doctor arrives on Karfel he soon discovers the Borad's horrifying plan - and realises he must be stopped at all costs.

(P) 2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd © 2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd

Reviews

Slick and polished...immersive productions of much-loved novelisations...long may we enjoy them

—— Doctor Who Magazine

A monumental work of journalism

—— Sunday Times

This is non-fiction writing at its best - uncluttered, evocative and well-researched... This is not a polemic. Elliott bears witness but does not preach; she shows but rarely tells. She does not pretend to be a neutral bystander (how could you immerse yourself in a struggling family for eight years and not root for them?) but does not intrude on her own storytelling. It is not a morality play either. The villains are too elusive and the heroes too flawed for that. This is structural, generational poverty at work in all its gruesome, demeaning inhumanity and punitive, institutional brutality.

—— Gary Younge , New Statesmen

A gripping and propulsive work of narrative non-fiction . . . [an] indelible, virtuosic portrait of contemporary America

—— Financial Times

A triumph of in-depth reporting and storytelling ... a visceral blow-by-blow depiction of what 'structural racism' has meant in the lives of generations of one family ... above all else it is a celebration of a little girl-an unforgettable heroine whose frustration, elation, exhaustion, and intelligence will haunt your heart.

—— Ariel Levy

An intimate exploration of poverty and racism in the U.S., as well as a portrait of a young person's resilience

—— Time

Invisible Child is hands down the best book I have read in years. Astonishing, remarkable, shocking, powerful, gripping, compelling. All of these words apply and more. This is a book of immense importance, written with tremendous craft and skill, but also compassion and verve . . . For those who have not read Invisible Child I am jealous, you are in for an extraordinary ride. Simply put, this is a masterpiece.

—— Thomas Harding, bestselling author of Hanns and Rudolf and The House by the Lake

Sure to linger in the minds of many readers long after the last page has been turned... What easily could have been, in lesser hands, voyeuristic or sensational is instead a rich narrative, empathetically told. Elliott is a masterful storyteller and, by sharing Dasani's story, she calls on all of us to dismantle the systems that so often failed her and countless others

—— NPR

A tour de force

—— The i

An eye-opening, heartbreaking and deeply enraging book about the realities of contemporary US inequality

—— Irish Times

A tender portrait of a family, and a tour of America's broken welfare systems and racist policies.

—— The Atlantic

A fascinating and powerful epic

—— Stylist

A towering feat of reporting that paints, layer by layer, an extraordinary portrait of a child, a family, a city, and the nation that produced them. From start to finish, she sustains an insatiably curious and deeply empathetic focus on worlds that so many people work hard, if mostly unconsciously, to never really see.

—— Howard W. French, author of Born in Blackness

A wonderful and important book.

—— Tracy Kidder, author of Mountains Beyond Mountains

Invisible Child is a tour de force of immersive reporting and a meticulous and unflinching depiction of intergenerational American poverty... Elliott exposes the granular texture of daily life with deep empathy, the punishing sameness of material want, and in the process paints a sweeping portrait of contemporary American life.

—— Anthony Lukas Prize Judge’s Citation , Nieman Foundation

Both a moving portrait and a devastating critique of America's enduring colour divide

—— Laura Spinney , New Statesmen

"From its first indelible pages to its rich and startling conclusion, Invisible Child had me, by turns, stricken, inspired, outraged, illuminated, in tears, and hungering for reimmersion in its Dickensian depths. This book is so many things: a staggering feat of reporting, an act of profound civic love, an extraordinarily moving tale about the fierceness of family love, and above all, a future American classic."

—— Ayad Akhtar, author of Homeland Elegies

With compassion and curiosity, [Elliott] uses the story of Dasani to make visible the cycles of poverty, inequity, and resilience that plague families across the United States ... This is a remarkable achievement that speaks to the heart and conscience of a nation.

—— Publishers Weekly

The Promise by Damon Galgut is a masterpiece - one of the best books I have read in the past decade and definitely my book of the year so far. Galgut is a master of the form. His free-flowing prose moves effortlessly from inside one character's head to another and displays a wealth of compassion and insight from multiple perspectives. This novel is a moving, brilliantly-told family epic with political resonance which also manages in parts to be darkly comic. Phenomenally good

—— Elizabeth Day

Superbly narrated, Galgut's book combines state-of-the-nation novel . . . with something like allegory or even Christian parable

—— Phil Baker , Sunday Times

A strange, skilful, spellbinding eighth novel . . . Galgut explores grief, despair and love in a way that feels ageless . . . By the end of this enormously enjoyable novel, our laughter has become complicity and farce become force

—— David Isaacs , Literary Review

A literary masterpiece of heart, soul and incorrupt wisdom. Galgut addresses conflict and reparation - both political and personal - with extraordinary skill, truthfulness and sensitivity.

—— Sarah Hall

The Promise recalls the great achievements of modernism in its imagistic brilliance, its caustic disenchantment, its relentless research into the human. For formal innovation and moral seriousness, Damon Galgut is very nearly without peer. He is an essential writer

—— Garth Greenwell

Galgut understands the complexities of the human heart which he reveals with the finest delicacy. This is an emotionally powerful and thrilling novel that haunts one long after it has been laid down

—— Gabriel Byrne

A surprising number of novelists are very good; few are extraordinary. Like his compatriot J.M. Coetzee, the South African writer Damon Galgut is of this rare company . . . To praise the novel in its particulars - for its seriousness; for its balance of formal freedom and elegance; for its humor, its precision, its human truth - seems inadequate and partial. Simply: you must read it. Like other remarkable novels, it is uniquely itself, and greater than the sum of its parts. The Promise evokes, when you reach the final page, a profound interior shift that is all but physical. This, as an experience of art, happens only rarely, and is to be prized

—— Claire Messud , Harpers US

I was mesmerised by The Promise, Damon Galgut's novel of the decline and fall of a South African family, told over four decades and four funerals. These are characters dancing on the edge of ruin, living out their lives around a family farm in Pretoria, a place suffused with the threat and consequence of violence. Galgut's prose is intoxicating, managing the rare feat of being utterly liberated and fiercely controlled. A brilliant book

—— Anna Hope

If possible, The Promise packs yet more of a punch than Galgut's previous novels. Fuelled by sex and death, this is a South African Gotterdammerung charting a white family's inexorable decline from significance and power. Its indignation at its morally bankrupt central characters is leavened with languid comedy, as though Galgut had collaborated with Tennessee Williams. The effect is utterly compelling

—— Patrick Gale

So acute, indeed, are Mr. Galgut's descriptions - of a character's inner life, a body's fragility, a family's shared wounds, a country's accumulated scars - that they seem like our perceptions, not his . . . Time and again in Mr. Galgut's fiction, South Africa materializes, vast, astonishing, resonant. And on this vastness, he stages intimate dramas that have the force of ancient myth

—— Anna Mundow , Wall Street Journal

This tour-de-force unleashes a searing portrait of a damaged family and a troubled country in need of healing

—— Publisher's Weekly (Starred review)

Galgut extends his extraordinary corpus with a rich story of family, history, and grief

—— Kirkus

Galgut is a terrifically agile and consistently interesting novelist, certain up there with Nadine Gordimer and JM Coetzee as a chronicler of his nation's anguished complexity

—— Jon Day , Guardian, *Book of the Week*

[A] magnificent new novel. Galgut sweeps his ruthlessly forensic gaze over each of the protagonists...as well as the country at large

—— Laura Battle , Financial Times, *Summer Reads of 2021*

Labelled a masterpiece and one of the best novels of the year within a week of publication... Galgut is on his finest form as he explores grief, despair and love in his inimitable style. Read this book if nothing else this year.

—— A Little Bird, *Summer Reads of 2021*

[A] gripping, profound tale... a damning commentary on South Africa's many broken promises

—— Economist

Ingenious... The most distinctive element of the novel, and its greatest pleasure, is the effortless way Galgut flows from mind to mind and body to body, whether male, female, pubertal, menopausal, maturing, ageing or dying. It's almost uncanny

—— Suzi Feay , Spectator

Surrender to the music of Galgut's prose, however, and the rewards are considerable

—— Max Liu , i

Excellent... The Promise is a powerful novel of character... [an] ambitious novel but, remarkably, Galgut rarely needs to strain for impact... his ability deftly to shift perspective from one character to the next creates a distinctive polyphonic effect

—— Alun David , Jewish Chronicle

A convincing and heartfelt novel

—— Eva Waite-Taylor , Independent

Politically chastening and technically superb. It's hard to see any novel beating it

—— Claire Allfree , Daily Telegraph

A powerful read

—— World of Cruising

This is the finest of all Damon Galgut's extraordinary novels. It reads as if the author has liberated himself from certain shackles he has needed in the past to convey the feelings of repression and social discomfort his people suffer... The writing - so impish, so playful - is a constant joy

—— Paul Bailey , Oldie

Vivid and suggestive, moving and often very funny

—— Alex Clark , Daily Telegraph, *Books of the Year*

Damon Galgut is the most worthy winner of the Booker prize we've seen for many years... The book trembles in the hand with its political relevance

—— Rose Tremain , New Statesman, *Books of the Year*

A sobering allegory, to be sure, but also a giddy pleasure, thanks to Galgut's restlessly acrobatic narrative voice, which darts and zooms unpredictably around the action

—— Anthony Cummins , Daily Mail, *Christmas Gift Guide 2021*

One of the world's great writers

—— Critic, *Books of the Year*

A dazzling feat of kaleidoscopic storytelling

—— Claire Allfree , The Times, *Books of the Year*

I would have chosen this novel before it won the Booker... What makes it special is the humanity with which it is written and Galgut's cinematic prose, which shifts seamlessly from one perspective to the next

—— Elizabeth Day , i, *Book of the Year*

The Promise...is a remarkable tale of four generations of one South African family and of the country itself. Like his earlier books, it reveals him as a master of human complexity. No wonder it won the Booker

—— Joan Bakewell , Observer, *Books of the Year*

A complex, clever, wryly observant tale of one family's decline amid a nation's birth

—— Patricia Nicol , Sunday Times, *Books of the Year*

[A] masterful, sweeping novel... a piercing dissection of a country at a decisive historical junction and the intersection of socio-political events and private life

—— Juanita Coulson , Lady, *Books of the Year*

The Promise is just 300 pages long, but Galgut shows his skills as a concise and piercing novelist by packing so much into this exceptional book

—— Martin Chilton , Independent, *Books of the Year*

A layered, clever and sometimes uncomfortable read, but with a gripping story

—— Claire Fuller , Daily Mail, *Books of the Year*

A remarkably successful combination of formal discipline and finely observed characterisation, it was a worthy winner of the 2021 Booker prize

—— Alun David , Jewish Chronicle, *Books of the Year*

The judges of this year's Booker prize rightly crowned this outstanding multigenerational saga... The morally chewy scenario is given extra zest by an acrobatic narrative voice full of trickery

—— Anthony Cummins , Metro, *Books of the Year*

The Promise...is mesmerising

—— Helena Morrisey , Daily Mail, *Books of the Year*

A joyful masterclass in fiction... a dizzying adventure that underlines one of the most appealing things about fiction: it is the closest we can ever get to inhabiting other perspectives

—— Susie Mesure , i

Inventive and full of energy

—— The Times, *Summer Reads of 2022*

Gentle, precise, insightful, melancholy but warm

—— Shehan Karunatilaka, author of THE SEVEN MOONS OF MAALI ALMEIDA , Daily Mail
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