Christopher Ryan, Georgia Moffett and Will Thorp are the readers of these three original stories featuring the Tenth Doctor, as played on TV by David Tennant.

Join the Doctor on these journeys in Time and Space. In The Taking of Chelsea 426, he visits a city-sized colony floating on the clouds of Saturn, just as some familiar foes arrive: the Sontarans. In Autonomy, an unspeakable terror is lurking on Level Zero of Hyperville, the hi-tech, 24 hour entertainment complex, where the stage is set for a battle with the Autons, In The Krillitane Storm, the Doctor finds medieval Worcester threatened by the legendary Devil’s Huntsman, in reality a menace he has encountered before.

The Taking of Chelsea 426 by David Llewellyn. Read by Christopher Ryan
Autonomy by Daniel Blythe. Read by Georgia Moffett
The Krillitane Storm by Christopher Cooper. Read by Will Thorp

Based on the hit BBC TV series. Duration: 16 hours 20 mins approx.

(P) BBC Worldwide 2019
(c) BBC Worldwide 2019

Text (c) David Llewellyn 2009, Daniel Blythe 2009, Christopher Cooper 2009

Doctor Who theme music composed by Ron Grainer and arranged by Murray Gold

TARDIS sound effect composed by Brian Hodgson


Doctor Who: The Crawling Terror

by Mike Tucker

Published 9 September 2014
"Well, I doubt you'll ever see a bigger insect."

Gabby Nichols is putting her son to bed when she hears her daughter cry out. 'Mummy there's a daddy longlegs in my room!' Then the screaming starts... Alan Travers is heading home from the pub when something rushes his face - a  spider's web. Then something huge and deadly lumbers from the shadows... Kevin Alperton is on his way to school when he is attacked by a mosquito. A big one. Then things get dangerous.

But it isn't the dead man cocooned inside a huge mass of web that worries the Doctor. It isn't the swarming, mutated insects that make him nervous. It isn't an old man's garbled memories of past dangers that intrigue him.  

With the village cut off from the outside world, and the insects becoming more and more dangerous, the Doctor knows that no one is safe. Not unless he can decode the strange symbols engraved on an ancient stone circle, and unravel a mystery dating back to the Second World War.

The Rising Night

by Scott Handcock

Published 8 September 2009

Demon Quest

by Paul Magrs

Published 1 April 2014

If there's one thing the Doctor ought to remember, it's this: he should never travel alone.

And to help make sure he always has someone suitably brilliant by his side, Clara has compiled this comprehensive guide to travelling with the Doctor. Packed full of hints and tips on topics such as introducing the Doctor to your family, packing for life on the TARDIS and practising alien first aid, this guide will fully prepare you for life as a companion!