Author:Stephen Cole,Justin Richards,India Fisher
An unabridged reading of this original BBC Books novel featuring the Sixth Doctor, as played on TV by Colin Baker. When an RAF squadron shoots down an unidentified aircraft over Turelhampton, the village is immediately evacuated. But why is the village still guarded by troops in 2001? When a television documentary crew break through the cordon looking for a story, they find they've recorded more than they'd bargained for. Caught up in both a deadly conspiracy and a historical mystery, retired Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart calls upon his old friend the Doctor. Half-glimpsed demons watch from the shadows as the Doctor and the Brigadier travel back in time to discover the last, and deadliest, secret of the Second World War. Duration: 8 hours approx
Crammed with laugh-out-loud moments
—— Daily TelegraphA rollicking good read
—— Bruce Dessau , Evening StandardA thoughtful, understated memoir
—— Joe Moran , GuardianWitty and enjoyable
—— Robert Elms , BBC Radio LondonCompelling
—— ChortleFascinating
—— Ray Darcy RTE RadioA simple, readable confessional … interspersed with Coogan’s trademark caustic asides and loads of telly and performance insight… If you love Coogan, this delivers
—— Observer - Books of 2015 in reviewSelf-aware, deferential and modest
—— Times Literary SupplementScholars of rock and roll still revere him for Awopbopaloobop, a passionate argument for the primacy of the three-minute pop song...A book ostensibly about popular music, but really about youth, innocence and rebellion
—— ObserverThe Hollywood Brats are the greatest band I’ve ever seen
—— Keith MoonBritain’s great lost punk band
—— Q-MagazineSo colourful, so comical, so damn bitchy... hilarious
—— Tony Fletcher , iJammingMatheson writes with the jagged verve he once sought from his band.
—— Kevin Canfield , Washington PostBiographical subject and author have found their perfect match.
—— Simon Shaw , Mail on SundayOne Man Band rumbles along… Welles in his middle years is a more engaging prospect than most artists at a similar point. He has been lucky to have Callow as a biographer, balancing warmth with skepticism, fondness with reproof.
—— Anthony Quinn , GuardianThis richly detailed and revelatory biography presents the most frank and intimate portrait yet of Ray Davies
—— CGA MagazineRogan does an excellent job of trying to work out what makes The Kinks’ enigmatic frontman tick whilst charting the tumultuous career of a band whose idiosyncratic but brilliant hits are currently enjoying a renaissance
—— Mail on SundayThis book is a good, solid, factually based read throughout… I imagine nearing six decades of recording history to be squeezed into one book is a task beyond the scope of a lot of authors, but this has been done rather well by Johnny Rogan… Excellent and complex.
—— Reg Seward , NudgeAn engaging and very accessible history book about our modern artistic achievements that, provocatively, also debunks some of the very icons it praises.
—— Simon Copeland , The Sun