Author:Alan Grant,Amber Rose Revah,Adam Basil,Doug Cockle

Brought to you by Penguin.
In Mega-City One a brutal murder is discovered, seemingly of unnatural origin. Around the globe there is a massive surge in psychic phenomena as people fall prey to visions and religious mania.
It seems that the world is on the brink of a psychic apocalypse and Psi-Judge Anderson must travel into the heart of Tibet to find the source of the disturbance! This collection bring together the very best of Alan Grant's (Lobo) and Arthur Ranson's (Button Man) work on this iconic comics character.
Featuring Amber Rose Revah as Judge Cassandra Anderson and an ensemble cast including Adam Basil and Doug Cockle, long-time fans and newcomers alike will be transported to the dystopian Mega-City One for an immersive listening experience like no other.
Also available:
Judge Dredd: Dredd Vs Death
Judge Dredd: Origins
Judge Dredd: America
Judge Dredd: The Pit
© Rebellion 2000 AD Ltd 2008 (P) Penguin Audio and Rebellion Publishing 2022
The book I'll be pressing into people's hands forever is Lolly Willowes . . . Starting as a straightforward, albeit beautifully written family saga, it tips suddenly into extraordinary, lucid wildness
—— Helen Macdonald , The New York Times Book ReviewA great shout of life and individuality ... an act of defiance that gladdens the soul
—— Justine Jordan , GuardianMy comfort read
—— Tracey ThornBeautiful and useful. His writing untangles the knots that tie us down, to families, to history. He writes to free us and deserves our thanks.
—— SpectatorLyrical, yearning, elegiac
—— Daily MailNorris is a terrific writer. His characters not only convince, they're invested with a depth of personality that fixes them in the reader's mind long after the book has been replaced on the shelf... Undoubtedly one of the finest novels to come out of these islands this or any year.
—— New EuropeanNorris's latest novel is a lyrical and affecting examination of love, life and the stories that shape us
—— Big IssueA deft novel about a struggling thirtysomething man's chance meeting with a girl he once saved from drowning and the changes the event sets in motion.
—— IndependentA beautiful novel, introspective and thoughtful. Undercurrent washes with a quiet intensity.
—— Claire Fuller, author of Unsettled GroundUndercurrent is a profound and absorbing story of flux, failures and joys that charts the beautiful, ineffable welter of life itself.
—— Alison MacLeod, author of TendernessWhat a beautiful, heartbreaking, wise, triumphant novel. Barney is an extraordinary writer, with a magical ability to reach into the depths of his characters' histories and chart the maps of their lives with grace and love and unstinting empathy. I always feel better about the world and the people in it after reading Barney's work.
—— Donal RyanNorris is a novelist of such insight and sensitivity that I found myself highlighting entire pages at a time to come back to. Compassionate and unnervingly funny in its depiction of love, grief, family and our points of origin, Undercurrent is a captivating sojourn in another consciousness. I feel like I know these people in real life. Understated but magical; quietly, utterly moving.
—— Luke Kennard, author of The TransitionBarney Norris has done it again and managed to destroy me with another book. Undercurrent is a powerful and really moving meditation on family and grief, written with all the thoughtfulness and grace I've come to expect from Barney's work.
—— Jan Carson, author of The RapturesA novel that, at every moment, chooses to be vulnerable, daring to show as much feeling as it possibly can - all those loves and losses that make up a life.
—— Lamorna Ash, author of Dark, Salt, ClearThe best description I have read of ghosts. The process of becoming a spectre. Fragments and glimpses. Scattered memory. I loved it.
—— Danny SapaniA gorgeous, noirish page-turner which also manages to be deeply intelligent. Norris has a remarkable ability to write about love and freedom - his writing shines a light on the way stories shape our lives.
—— Sophie Ratcliffe, author of The Lost Properties of LoveA visceral, beautifully-told, intergenerational story that reaches impossibly beyond the end of life to the first moments of love, through what we inherit from the past, what we may be able to create, and what we leave behind.
—— Professor Dan Hicks, author of The Brutish MuseumsA novel about growing up after you have already grown up. Barney Norris writes with enormous compassion for his characters and the world around them
—— Sara Baume, author of Spill Simmer Falter WitherI read Undercurrent with pleasure and admiration. Gripping and thoroughly absorbing
—— Abdulrazak Gurnah, winner of the Nobel Prize in LiteratureA perceptive novel about family and how the stories of the past we tell aren't always clear-cut
—— Good HousekeepingThis tender, thoughtful novel captures the dilemmas of being human - the mundane and momentous things left unsaid, and expectations we can't fulfil.
—— Woman & HomeJoyful
—— StylistThis top-rank tale of beating the odds is full of heart and breezy charm
—— MetroAltogether, it makes for a gripping and engaging read about a woman persevering against all odds, recognising your limits and knowing when to push back. As well as a complex and nuanced character study, Carrie Soto is Back offers its readers a warm-hearted story of the love between a father and a daughter, as well a tender journey of learning how to love yourself and open up to others too. Between the action-packed tennis matches, Carrie's emotional reckoning and the wider commentary of women having to continuously fight for recognition in male-dominated fields, Taylor Jenkins Reid has crafted another compelling novel that effortlessly draws in readers and will no doubt keep them thinking about Carrie Soto long after they turn the final page
—— CultureflyAt times, her prose is so engaging that you feel as though you are waiting on the baseline while Soto gets ready to serve an unstoppable ace
—— Independent (Ireland)In Carrie Soto is Back, as at Flushing Meadows this and next month, there are great rivalries, millions of dollars and legacies on the line. Letting go cuts deep. But, boy, there is glamour
—— TatlerThe author has created another heroine we can't quite work out whether we like, but we're rooting for her anyway because she's fabulous
—— Woman's WeeklyAnother delectable slice of escapism drama
—— Living NorthPacy, propulsive and utterly immersive, you're going to want to read this
—— ElleTaylor has done it again . . . a brilliant and dynamic book about what it means to be an ambitious woman- for better or for worse
—— WomanWith a wonderfully complex character, a world you can't help being seduced by, and an important message about it never being too late, TJR has served up another ace
—— HeatFrank, funny and emotional
—— Marie ClaireA fascinatingly realistic look into the world of elite sports where driven and flawed characters' private lives are just as intriguing and controversial as they are on the court
—— Business PostThis is a well-researched, exciting and genuinely tender book
—— RTÉ






