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Doctor Who: Decades Collection 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s  By  cover art

Doctor Who: Decades Collection 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s

By: Jacqueline Rayner, Tasha Suri, Mark Griffiths
Narrated by: Jacob Dudman, Vineeta Rishi
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Publisher's summary

Brought to you by Puffin.

An audio bundle of three Doctor Who stories to celebrate the 60th anniversary.

1960s - Imaginary Friends by Jacqueline Rayner

It's Christmas, 1963, when nine-year-old Gerald starts dreaming of strange worlds and monsters.

His parents think it's harmless at first. But Gerald is convinced it's real - his dreams of Daleks and cavemen and insects as big as a person.

Desperate for help, what Gerald's family really need, right now, is a Doctor.

1970s - The Cradle by Tasha Suri

It is London, 1978, and tensions are high. Seema and her family are struggling, but she has learnt to keep her head down, not create trouble.

That is until she and her two friends, Terrence and Inderjit, decide to join an anti-National Front protest in the East End.

And when trouble does inevitably find them, the friends are saved by the appearance of a mysterious, seemingly broken-down bus.

But inside this bus it is like nothing any of them have ever seen. It is a journey through the most wonderful landscapes, where visions of hopes and dreams envelop the lost group.

Who - or what - is this strange place? The tall, grumpy man might know the answers, but then he also seems just as confused as they are...

1980s - The Self-Made Man by Mark Griffiths

Midnight, 1984.

In a sprawling, run-down housing estate in south London, a man returning from a night out in the West End finds himself pursued by a strange hooded figure.

So naturally when the Doctor and Romana arrive in the TARDIS the next day, they find themselves in the middle of a crime scene.

But when child genius Matthew Pickles - inventor of a hugely popular handheld videogame - arrives to help them crack the case, they discover there is more to this than meets the eye.

Someone has been messing with technology that's not of this earth, blurring the lines between human...and cyber. And it looks like they're out for revenge.

In a world on the brink of gadgets and gismos and dangerous tech, the pair must uncover the killer, before they strike again.

BBC, DOCTOR WHO and TARDIS (word marks and devices) are trade marks of the British Broadcasting Corporation and are used under licence. BBC logo © BBC 1996. DOCTOR WHO logo © BBC 1973. Licensed by BBC Studios.

©2023 Jacqueline Rayner, Tasha Suri, Mark Griffiths (P)2023 Penguin Audio

What listeners say about Doctor Who: Decades Collection 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s

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Really fun adventures, great stories

Totally captured the energy and Doctor vibe, really enjoyed this series so much! So good.

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Two out of three ain't bad.

The first story, Imaginary Friends, feels like a celebration of the black and white era of Doctor Who, which is an odd choice for a collection aimed at younger readers (or listeners), but it's very effective. The second story, "The Cradle," deals with some mature themes (racism, sexuality) that are obviously personal to the author, and is probably my favorite of the three. The third is a comparatively bog-standard Doctor Who adventure.

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