Audiobooks narrated by Peter Harpley currently available

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Living in the Soul (with a bear) audiobook written and narrated by Peter Harpley
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Living with the Soul (with a bear)
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Purchase Living in the Soul (with a bear) audiobook on Amazon UK - Amazon USA  - Amazon Canada or Amazon Australia or directly through your Audible account

Do you wonder 'Who or What exactly is God?' What if faith in God is not about certainty—but about love, doubt, and the courage to keep asking questions?

Living in the Soul (with a Bear) is a luminous theological memoir that follows one man’s lifelong spiritual journey beyond doctrine, dogma, and fear. Raised a Christian but uneasy with institutional religion, Peter Harpley explores belief as something lived rather than declared—shaped by childhood vulnerability, profound moments of grace, and an enduring sense that God is present not in authority, but in love.

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The last sword before the Crimson audiobook narrated by Peter Harpley
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The last sword before the crimson - Prologue - Science fiction / fantasy
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The Last Sword before the Crimson - A chronicle of the Black Order - Volume 1

In production - Expected in June 2026

The Last Sword Before the Crimson is a grim, high-gothic space-crusade novel set in 3989 AC during the Third Age of the War for the Adamite Throne universe. It follows High Knight-Lord Alaric Thorne, one of the last surviving champions of the Order of Black, aboard the war-reliquary Norman One. The book opens with the Order shattered, hunted by the Crimson Order, and nearly erased by prior catastrophe. What remains is not a triumphant crusade, but a wounded remnant carrying vows, relics, and memory into a war that refuses to end.

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Push the falling Nietzsche audiobook narrated by Peter Harpley
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Push the Falling Nietzsche - Philosophy / Memoir
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Push the falling Nietzsche by Boris Kriger

In Production - expected July 2026

Nietzsche said: push the falling. A plush bear says: sit down. Have some tea. Boris Kriger — former priest, systems theorist, and the man who may have solved the universe with one formula and zero free parameters — has spent twenty years arguing with a dead philosopher at his kitchen table. The philosopher said God is dead. Kriger yells at God regularly and considers this proof of His existence. The philosopher said pity is poison. Kriger ran a shelter for fourteen homeless people in his own house for nine years. The philosopher said the strong must overcome. Kriger lost everything — his church, his wife, his son, his home — and discovered that the only thing left was a cup of tea and the willingness to sit with someone who is falling. This is not a book about Nietzsche. This is a book about what happens after Nietzsche. After the God is dead and the Overman has arrived in silicon and the universe turns out to be solved and the wife comes back and the son returns and the porridge is ready and the chair across the table is empty, waiting for anyone who needs it. Including Nietzsche. Especially Nietzsche. Pull up a chair. The tea is ready. There is an extra cup.

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The Empty Bed audiobook narrated by Peter Harpley
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The Empty Bed - Fiction
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The Empty Bed by William Gomes

In production - due 31 August

Before the file, before the finding, before the apology, there was a child who should have been heard. When sixteen-year-old Callum Vale dies, his family is left inside a silence no parent should have to carry.In the long year between his death and the opening of the inquest, his mother, father and younger sister move through grief, school records, complaint responses, crisis-line contact, safeguarding language and the ordinary objects he has left behind: a school shirt, a weather notebook, a toothbrush, an empty bed.Set in York, The Empty Bed is a deeply moving literary novel about bereavement, autism, family love, institutional failure and the unbearable question left when a child was not heard in time. Written with restraint and compassion, the novel does not depict the death itself. Instead, it stays with what remains: the room, the records, the silence, and the family’s search for truth.

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Stormbound

Stormbound

In production: Expected August 2026

Magnus Björnsson was never a hero. Sixteen years old, unsure of himself, and trying to survive the humiliation of being beaten nearly to death after wrestling practice, Magnus believed his life might end in a dark alley. Instead, he awakens somewhere far more dangerous.

Transported to the brutal realm of Norskheimr in the year 672 AC, Magnus finds himself in the middle of the endless war that shapes the universe of The War for the Adamite Throne. Here, survival is not guaranteed. Here, monsters roam ancient forests, giants rule frozen kingdoms, and warriors earn power through blood and battle. Armed with nothing but his will to live, Magnus encounters a mysterious talking wolf named Krieg, a cunning and ruthless companion who begins forging the frightened boy into something far more dangerous.

Through relentless training, brutal combat, and divine trials set by the old gods themselves, Magnus learns to wield the weapons of Norskheimr—massive war axes and storm-forged runes.

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Homo Credens
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Homo Credens The Believing Species - academic
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Purchase Homo Credens: The believing species audiobook on Amazon UK - Amazon USA  - Amazon Canada or Amazon Australia

Why do we believe more than we can prove? Why does memory deceive us? Why do the most sophisticated artificial intelligence systems "hallucinate" false information? In Homo Credens: The believing Species, Boris Kriger reveals a profound truth about the nature of complex minds: any sufficiently complex system—whether human brain, animal cognition, or artificial intelligence—must believe far more than it can verify. This is not a limitation to be overcome but an architecture to be understood.