Author:Jonathan Morris

‘The past is like a foreign country. Nice to visit, but you really wouldn't want to live there.’
In 2003, Rebecca Whitaker died in a road accident. Her husband Mark is still grieving. He receives a battered envelope, posted eight years earlier, containing a set of instructions with a simple message: ‘You can save her.’
As Mark is given the chance to save Rebecca, it’s up to the Doctor, Amy and Rory to save the whole world. Because this time the Weeping Angels are using history itself as a weapon.
An adventure featuring the Eleventh Doctor, as played by Matt Smith, and his companions Amy and Rory
A thrilling, all-new adventure... Spectacular
—— Goodreads.comAn outstanding, compelling drama from Downham
—— The BooksellerIt's one of the most powerful books we've read in an age. Even after finishing, it lingered with us for days . . . Jenny Downham's novel blows other books out of the water
—— SugarI loved it . . . Beautifully written with a painful but penetrating awareness
—— BookbagA tale of love across the social divide in coastal Norfolk, with the edge of a crime novel . . . Split loyalties and the chasm between the young couple's life experiences make their enduring relationship a triumph. Their credible and tender sexual encounter is the calm before the storm, as for Romeo and Juliet
—— ObserverKnausgaard's Proustian attention to detail and scrupulous analysis of emotional nuance is almost maddening – but ultimately magnificent
—— VogueKnausgaard continues masterfully
—— Malcolm Forbes , Literary ReviewOne of the most anticipated books of the year (the decade)
—— Emily Stokes , Financial TimesHis devotees gobble each new volume with an eagerness previously reserved only for box sets of Borgen
—— Tim Martin , Daily TelegraphKnausgaard transforms the personal and mundane into the universal and perennially significant... There is such depth of feeling beneath the vibrant exterior, such sense of the goodness present in human existence
—— Paul Binding , SpectatorAccessibly and punchily written, an intimate, determined and ultimately successful attempt to shape the tiny mundanities of life into something quite unexpectedly beautiful, compelling and substantial
—— Paul Connolly , MetroKnausgaard is a writer strong enough to survive the hype... A masterpiece for the age of the selfie... Brutally frank about the frustrations of marriage, work and parenthood, it's often horrifying and deeply funny
—— Anthony Cummins , ObserverCompelling
—— Andrew Neather , Evening StandardAstounding... A work of such sincerity that, to paraphrase Baudelaire, the paper shrivels and flares at the touch of his fiery pen
—— Daniel Fraser , QuietusFree-form, fear-filled, densely descriptive…Norway’s biggest literary star since Ibsen… [Knausgaard] has no obvious superiors among the writers now available to an English-reading public
—— Leo Robson , New Statesman