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Doctor Who: The Lost TV Episodes Collection: (1965-1966) No. 2 by AudioGo AudioBook CD

Doctor Who: The Lost TV Episodes Collection: (1965-1966) No. 2 by AudioGo AudioBook CD

Doctor Who: The Lost TV Episodes Collection: (1965-1966) No. 2 by AudioGo


Get other Science Fiction AudioBooks here

Get other Dr Who Science Fiction AudioBooks here

Travel back to the early days of Doctor Who with these four adventures starring William Hartnell as the first Doctor - plus a bonus programme. Absent from the television archives, each of these stories survives only as a soundtrack recording. Now remastered, with additional linking narration, you can enjoy the adventures once more - and learn what happened to the missing episodes with a special bonus disc. "'The Daleks' Master Plan" (13 episodes, first broadcast October 1965-January 1966): The Daleks have stolen the Time Destructor, and are threatening to destroy the fabric of Time itself. In a bid to stop them, the Doctor steals the taranium core which powers the weapon. Pursued across Time and Space, the TARDIS crew are in grave danger..."The Massacre" (4 episodes, first broadcast February 1966): The TARDIS materialises in Paris in 1572, a time of great danger and religious strife. When Steven witnesses the execution of a man who uncannily resembles the Doctor, he is horrified. Can the Doctor really have been killed in front of his eyes? "The Celestial Toymaker" (4 episodes, first broadcast April 1966): The travellers arrive in the dangerous domain of the Toymaker, where their failure to win at a series of games could result in them becoming his playthings for eternity. "The Savages" (4 episodes, first broadcast May-June 1966): The TARDIS has arrived on a distant and seemingly idyllic world, but the Doctor, Steven and Dodo discover that it hides a terrible secret..."Doctor Who - The Lost Episodes" (First broadcast December 2009): What happened to the 108 missing episodes of "Doctor Who" from the 1960s? Shaun Ley investigates in this edition of "Archive on 4", plus: linking narration by Peter Purves; bonus interviews with Peter Purves; and, high quality scans, presented as PDF files, of the original BBC TV camera scripts.

Talking Books are a fantastic way to read a book. Audio Books can be used anytime, many times when you would have no likelihood to read through a book. You can enjoy listening to to an talking book whilst you are taking the train. AudioBooks can be a way to gain additional comprehension. Students while listening have a improved ability to understand the words. Humans have had a long custom of transferring myths on to the next generation by remembering long complicated stories and retelling them often. You can convert your audiobook on CD to mp3 format there is guidance here on converting your CD talking book to a format that can be made use of by your ipod, rockbox or other mp3 portable player. More insight on what audio books are here

Doctor Who: The Lost TV Episodes Collection: (1965-1966) No. 2 by AudioGo


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