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Doctor Who: Yeti Attack!
Doctor Who: Yeti Attack!
Oct 7, 2024 4:29 PM

Author:BBC,Frazer Hines,Patrick Troughton,Full Cast

Doctor Who: Yeti Attack!

The Abominable Snowmen: Tibet, 1935: English explorer Travers is determined to track down the mythical Abominable Snowmen which are said to roam the Himalayas. When the Doctor and his companions visit the nearby Detsen monastery they discover that the Yeti are all too prominent - in fact, they are out to kill anyone who comes near! With Travers' help the travellers discover that the monastery is in the grip of the evil Great Intelligence, a disembodied force which has taken control of the High Lama - and the robotic Yeti are merely its deadly servants... The Web of Fear: After narrowly avoiding being caught up in a web-like substance on its journey through space, the TARDIS arrives in the tunnels of the London Underground, only to find that the web is there too - as is the Great Intelligence's Yeti... Facing the marauding monsters is Patrick Troughton as the second Doctor, in adventures set in Tibet and London. Linking narration is provided by Frazer Hines, who also plays Jamie in the stories. The Web of Fear marks the first appearance of Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart, a colonel in the British Army but soon to be promoted to Brigadier of UNIT, who became one of the programme's best-loved and most recognisable characters.

Reviews

The first two episodes of The Abominable Snowmen romp along very nicely indeed. Frazer (Jamie) Hines' linking narration sounds particularly sprightly... Web remains essential listening for the debut appearance of Nicholas Courtney as Colonel (later, of course, promoted to Brigadier) Lethbridge-Stewart

—— Richard McGinlay , http://www.sci-fi-online.com

Herzog's pilgrimage is a fugue and an absurdist comedy as rich as anything in his cinema'. Iain Sinclair

—— Iain Sinclair

This is no tired rock story but something far more profound, funny and disturbing.

—— Irish Times

A frank account of his own love/hate relationship with America.

—— GQ Magazine

Extremely enjoyable

—— Sunday Times

Fry's linguistic facility remains one of the Wildean wonders of the new media age. The patron saint of British intelligence

—— Daily Telegraph

Even if you weren’t there when all this happened, the fast paced narrative will make you feel as if you were … An excellent read and I really would urge anyone with even a passing interest in punk, The Jam, The Who or what it was like being a music mad teenager in London in the late seventies to check it out.

—— Faith Magazine

Autobiography is rarely this can-do and candid.

—— David Quantick

A five star book from the ace face biographer …This honest, pre-pubescent tale of Fletcher’s formative years is frank, candid and, at times, more brutally gory and sexually explicit than a ‘This is England’ sequel. But as his innocent, bullied, under-developed, paternally undernourished, maternally pampered, determined, stubborn squeaky voiced, rubbish-at-sex music-obsessed skinny body is laid out in a top fifty countdown for all to poke at… he suddenly matures, and emerges as a keen, spirited, clever and resourceful fifth year ready to start a record label … right after he loses his virginity.

—— Julie Hamill Blog

A must for anyone with an interest in the 1970s and 80s music scene … Featuring a vibrant cast of supporting characters … Boy About Town in an evocative and wholly original account of growing up and coming of age in the glory days of the 1970s.

—— City Life

Funny, fascinating, and at times quite moving

—— The Bookbag

Fletcher paints a vivid picture of the time – both through the eyes of a boy dealing with growing up and into the underground music scene of bands, fanzines, small record labels, and a staunchly independent spirit …It’s a great read and one which potentially invites the difficult second album syndrome.

—— Monkey Picks

Praise for A Light That Never Goes Out: [A] meticulous biography…This exhaustive, well-researched account brings fresh detail and thought to the party.

—— The Sunday Times

Praise for A Light That Never Goes Out: The story of the Smiths told on the basis of interviews with just about every surviving participant in the Smiths' story. As the story winds on, a chain of no-shows, fits of pique and self-sabotage ... reaches its denouement with an episode from April 1987, just prior to the band's formal break-up. Fletcher is the first writer to have got the full story. Such material highlights the extent to which Fletcher has done his research.

—— Guardian

Praise for A Light That Never Goes Out: An exhaustive labour of love that was three years in the writing but which will be lapped up by fans of the band...written with a real sense of love and affection for the group who, though they were only together for a mere five years, tilted the world on its axis to a degree not seen since the heyday of the Beatles and the Stones…Fletcher is excellent when it comes to widening the view to include the cultural and historical factors behind the band's emergence and the city from which they came.

—— Irish Independent

Now his autobiography is out in paperback and reading it is like having the man himself talk to you from the comfort of his armchair. It’s a fascinating insight into a lost world … A true gent.

—— Sun

In his brimmingly insightful, stimulating study of how stories work, Yorke compellingly unpicks how a whole range of films, plays, novels and fairy tales all display the same archetypal structures . . . His book, in telling scores of stories in such a fresh, enlightening and accessible manner, is a gripping read from beginning to end

—— Sunday Times

The best book on the subject [of storytelling] I've read, tells us everything we need to know about it. Yorke's analysis is superb

—— London Evening Standard

A mightily impressive opus, both hugely informative and highly educational. I love the way it's populated with so many examples - the many combinations of both mass market and the slightly more esoteric giving a something-for-everyone feeling. A brilliant work

—— Peter James, best-selling author of NOT DEAD ENOUGH and LOOKING GOOD DEAD

Yorke sets out to analyse the patterns behind storytelling, explaining why the fundamentals of narrative have remained the same from Aristotle to Aaron Sorkin. A great starting point for anyone wanting to create a story

—— Stuff Magazine

I've just read a book about professional writing which has genuinely helped me. It's for those who are serious about avoiding bad 'How To' books and want to raise their game, and it's more intelligent than most of the others. John Yorke's Into The Woods: How Stories Work And Why We Tell Them is a genuine game-changer and has helped me put past bad habits to rest

—— Christopher Fowler, Author of Bryant and May

Into The Woods is utterly brilliant

—— Ed Cumming , Daily Telegraph

Love storytelling? You need this inspiring book. John Yorke dissects the structure of stories with a joyous enthusiasm allied to precise, encyclopaedic knowledge. Guaranteed to send you back to your writing desk with newfound excitement and drive

—— Chris Chibnall, creator and writer of Broadchurch and The Great Train Robbery

Into The Woods is brilliant. One of the best books on script writing out there . . . I loved the book. Inspiring

—— Dominic Mitchell, creator and writer of In The Flesh

There is no end of books that instruct us on how to write the perfect screenplay, but few that delve more deeply into the art of storytelling than this erudite volume

—— Financial Times

Its strength is Yorke's acute perception of the wellsprings of universal narrative structures relevant to all artistic activities

—— The Times

Terrific . . . It's a great read, wise and cogent, and a must for all screenwriters

—— David Eldridge, writer of Festen and In Basildon

It's a great read. It makes me smile and say 'Yes!' aloud. Only this and PG Wodehouse do that

—— Lucy Gannon, writer/creator of Soldier Soldier, Peak Practice, Frankie, The Best Of Men

Not How 2 Write them but how stories work. John Yorke's Into the Woods: A 5 Act Journey into Story is brilliant, illuminates & explains

—— Susan Hill, Author, The Woman In Black, I’m The King Of The Castle

I'm only 70 pages into John Yorke's Into the Woods but it's already helped me crack two stories

—— Andy Diggle, former editor of 2000AD, comic book writer for Marvel, DC

Highly recommended reading

—— Huffington Post

Yorke is aware that the world is not suffering for lack of prescriptive screenwriting manuals. Instead, with Into the Woods, he takes a scalpel to narrative structure - dissecting protagonist, antagonist, inciting incident, crisis and so on - before asking how and why this underlying shape still holds audiences spellbound like a fairytale witch. "A story is like a magnet dragged through randomness," Yorke writes, but while he elegantly untangles the deepest roots of storytelling, he also honours the human need for truth and sense with some more superficial questions: why do series tend to "jump the shark" round about season three, for example, or why is clunky exposition - particularly in medical dramas - so appallingly comical? Sit comfortably, then begin

—— Guardian

I absolutely love this book. It's incredible and so well written. I keep trying to find fault but so far no joy - It's so good

—— Matt Charman, writer Bridge of Spies (dir Stephen Spielberg); Black Work (ITV)

[John Yorke's] writing book is arguably possibly almost as good as mine, all right it's loads better shut up

—— David Quantick, Author of HOW TO WRITE EVERYTHING

Probably, in the hackneyed phrase, "the last book on screenwriting you'll ever need." He is very good at debunking the claims of some screenwriting gurus, all of whom are busy trying to sell you their own particular brand of snake oil. It's truly excellent

—— Tim Adler , Daily Telegraph

Of all the books I've read about story construction and the art of fiction, this one is the most comprehensive and concise

—— John Collee, writer on 'Master And Commander', 'Happy Feet', 'Creation', 'Walking With Dinosaurs'
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