Author:Joseph Lidster,James Goss,Rupert Laight,Gareth David-Lloyd,John Barrowman,Eve Myles,Full Cast

John Barrowman, Eve Myles and Gareth David-Lloyd star in seven full-cast BBC Radio 4 dramas based on the hit BBC TV series. In Lost Souls by Joseph Lidster, voices from the past are calling out from the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, and scientists are disappearing. Can Torchwood help? In Asylum by Anita Sullivan, PC Andy Davidson turns to Torchwood after he arrests a very unusual shoplifter. Who is Freda, and where she is from? In Golden Age by James Goss, Jack discovers that a dangerous energy field centres on an old colonial mansion: Torchwood India. In The Dead Line by Phil Ford, a Cardiff hospital is inundated with patients who have fallen into coma-like trances, all of them triggered by phone calls… In The Devil and Miss Carew by Rupert Laight, Gwen and Rhys are involved in a nursing home mystery. What is Miss Carew’s connection with a series of national power cuts?? In Submission by Ryan Scott, the Torchwood team find themselves at the mercy of a hungry alien at the bottom of the sea... In The House of the Dead by James Goss, a special séance is held at the most haunted pub in Wales - but when the ghosts start arriving, all hell breaks loose... With a guest cast including Freema Agyeman, Tom Price, Martin Jarvis and Rosalind Ayres, the collection includes a bonus behind-the-scenes feature, Torchwood: All Access. Duration: 5 hours 25 mins approx.
Loved it!
—— Miranda DickinsonA delicious Christmas read!
—— Trisha AshleyThis feel good rom-com is perfectly festive and great fun.
—— CloserMasterful . . . A multi-layered and thoroughly gripping book, which works as a poignant love story, a powerful dissection of how US imperialist machinations have turned so many people against the world's superpower - and as a thriller that subtly ratchets up the nerve-jangling tension towards an explosive ending
—— MetroThe Reluctant Fundamentalist is an important book
—— Evening StandardA fantastic piece of work, superbly considered and controlled, with a lovely stillness and wisdom at its heart
—— The TimesBeautifully written
—— Philip PullmanA profoundly contemporary story about civil wars, unstable countries and refugees pouring to the cities of the West... beautifully written, with the ghost of Camus hovering at the edge of the frame
—— New StatesmanOne of those rare writers who can do the magic of completely disappearing and letting his characters…speak for themselves… Thorpe is not a regular fixture on literary prize shortlists. Surely that will change with this engrossing, unforgettable work of wonder.
—— Melissa Katsoulis , The TimesAdam Thorpe’s superb new novel will put this gifted novelist back on the map... A tour-de-force of depth and nuance... Missing Fay is superb on many levels... A vivid portrait of a particular locality, a psychological study of overlapping lives, a pitch-perfect piece of ventriloquism...and a sweeping conspectus of contemporary concerns.
—— Sunday TimesThorpe’s ability to inhabit [his] disparate characters is hugely impressive, and he excels at charting the often volatile mood swings within a relationship.
—— Anthony Gardner , Mail on SundayAdam Thorpe is a wonderfully sympathetic novelist with a keen eye and alert ear... You cannot but admire and enjoy his ability to portray such a variety of people and to explore the randomness of barely-connected experiences. It’s a novel that demands, and deserves, to be read slowly, with close attention.
—— Allan Massie , ScotsmanMissing Fay is a welcome and timely work about loneliness and alienation in a rootless, restless England. In years to come, when we are trying to understand the complexities that led from “Broken Britain” to Brexit, this thoughtful, unsettling and intricate novel may well provide some of the answers.
—— Andrew Michael Hurley , GuardianA vibrant ensembles piece unfolding around the disappearance of a teenage girl… Missing Fay… inhabits each of its characters one chapter at a time – a...vivid approach that affords a steady pulse of dramatic irony as well as a measure of suspense… [A] rich novel of loose ends.
—— Anthony Cummins , ObserverThere is no typical Adam Thorpe novel… Missing Fay defies categorisation and shows off his finest literary tricks.
—— Fiona Wilson , The TimesFluent and prolific, he ranges easily between voices and subjects… threaded together with care and panache… Most of the men in the novel…entertain fantasies about vulnerable women… In Missing Fay, Thorpe attempts, with typical self-effacement, to give them a voice of their own.
—— Sam Kitchener , Daily TelegraphIt’s wry, visceral, angry and wise.
—— Andrew Michael Hurley , ObserverEngrossing.
—— Anthony Cummins , Daily TelegraphIf you believe that English fiction is jaded, you must read Adam Thorpe
—— Hilary MantelAn intricately crafted novel, sharp-eared, current and full of heart, about a lost teenager in a lost England.
—— Hilary Mantel , ObserverAn upmarket take on the Gone Girl mystery.
—— Mark Lawson , Guardian, Books of the YearWith tremendous flair, Thorpe opens up a vista of present-day middle England.
—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times, Books of the YearThe whole novel is full of hilarious, brilliant observations about writing, life and crushes.
—— Curtis Sittenfeld , ObserverOne of the funniest and most inventive youngish writers of non-fiction in America… Selin’s meandering observations and gentle humour make her an engaging narrator… Batuman examines complex subjects with an appealing lightness of touch… The scene when Selin leaves the Hungarian village is surprisingly moving and encapsulates the overall effect of a novel which reminds us that dead time can be full of life.
—— Max Liu , iSweetly funny, The Idiot rejects the doctrine of omitting needless words in favour of marvelling…at the complexities of language and communication.
—— Hannah Rosefield , New StatesmanCharming… A gentle coming-of-age novel drawing on Batuman’s time at Harvard in the mid-1990s… It’s in such acute portrayals of early adulthood’s uncertainties that this pleasantly rambling tale leaves its most vivid impression.
—— Alex Dean , ProspectA delightfully digressive campus novel.
—— Kate Loftus O'Brien , AnOtherThere is more than one idiot in this delightful and slyly funny coming-of-age novel... Will strike a chord for any former fresher who felt the same way. (That would be all of us.)
—— Sarra Manning , RedBatuman, in seemingly writing a novel about nothing, has produced an incredibly complex, accurate and funny novel.
—— Rachael Revesz , IndependentI never want to finish it, so I’m reading it very slowly.
—— Lauren Waterman , ELLEEvery page is thicketed with jokes, riffs, theories of language. It’s a portrait of an intellectual and sentimental education that offers almost unseemly pleasure.
—— Parhul Sehgal , New York TimesElif Batuman is a real writer, and should be allowed to write whatever the hell she likes.
—— Daniel Soar , London Review of BooksSelin’s deadpan narration is often very funny indeed
—— Leaf Arbuthnot , Sunday TimesThis is a capacious book that creates an alternative world
—— Lara Feigel , GuardianAt once clever and clueless, Batuman’s heroine shows us with just how messy it can be to forge a self
—— London Property SouthOne of the best novels I read all summer... a painstakingly accurate depiction of the balancing act that is student-life. As clever as it is funny, Batuman's debut novel allows us to laugh at our own stupidity, and celebrate our own cluelessness.
—— VarsityThe Idiot... manages the trick of being laugh-out-loud funny while not actually being a comedy. It just observers life, in all its truth and is hilarious for page after page.
—— Patrick Ness , GuardianI finally read The Idiot by Elif Batuman and everyone is correct, she is clearly a genius
—— White Review, *Books of the Year*






