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Doctor Who: Night Of The Humans
Doctor Who: Night Of The Humans
Nov 14, 2024 10:10 PM

Author:David Llewellyn,Arthur Darvill

Doctor Who: Night Of The Humans

'This is the Gyre - the most hostile environment in the Galaxy'. 250,000 years' worth of junk floating in deep space, home to the shipwrecked Sittuun, the carnivorous Sollogs, and worst of all - the Humans. The Doctor and Amy arrive on this terrifying world in the middle of an all-out frontier war between Sittuun and Humans, and the countdown has already started. There's a comet in the sky, and it's on a collision course with the Gyre... When the Doctor is kidnapped, it's up to Amy and 'galaxy-famous swashbuckler' Dirk Slipstream to save the day. But who is Slipstream, exactly? And what is he really doing here? Arthur Darvill, who played Rory in Doctor Who, reads this thrilling adventure featuring the Doctor and Amy, as played by Matt Smith and Karen Gillan in the spectacular hit series from BBC Television.

Reviews

Maxwell is a transportive narrator, able to convey the there-but-for-the-grace-of-God aspect of this horrendous yet hopeful story with terrific evocation.

—— Johnny Davis , Q Magazine

Funny, full of love but refreshingly unsentimental

—— The London Paper

Maxwell narrates their remarkable story with barrels of rough-and ready Glaswegian drollery

—— London Lite

His spirited determination to overcome all that he's been through is humbling to witness

—— Guardian

A remarkable journey of rehabilitation... The story of Collins's catastrophic illness is horrific, but sometimes funny and, ultimately hopeful too

—— Sunday Herald

You'll finish this remarkable book with a lump in your throat and admiration for the courage of both writer and subject

—— Word

Beautifully penned...a heart warming and inspirational read

—— The List

He has produced a remarkable autobiography . . . It makes gripping, sometimes unbearably sad, sometimes confusing reading . . . exhilarating, humane, zany, literary

—— Spectator

No one can make you feel quite like Stephen Fry can . . . Funny and tormentedly frank

—— Time Out

Hugely enjoyable . . . compulsively readable . . . Fry is excellent on the details of memory, too, and always able to embellish them with effortless erudition . . . this engaging, engrossing read is as honest a portrait of a young liar as one could hope to read

—— Scotsman

He is bubbly, funny and charming, and he gives his fans plenty of material if they want to speculate on why he is both so gifted and so wayward

—— The Times

The jokes . . . transcend the complexes of the joker, turning the Stephenesque into a national as well as a family treasure

—— Guardian

Not so much an autobiography, more a way of life; discursive, funny, sometimes almost unbelievably sad, opinionated, nostalgic and very infectious

—— Claire Rayner, New Statesman

Fry can be funny about anything

—— Good Book Guide

So charming and so acute that one cannot help forgiving him

—— Daily Express
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