He is the author of Facing the Music: An Invitation to Active Listening Enjoyment (ISBN 0-536-59495-3) and he has also written widely in support of Colin Wilson and the New Existentialism.
Woodrow Wilson | Colin Powell | Harold Wilson | Pete Wilson | Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars | Colin Farrell | Brian Wilson | Wilson | Edmund Wilson | Colin Firth | Owen Wilson | Colin Baker | James Wilson | Colin James | Colin Davis | Wilson Pickett | Teddy Wilson | Richard Wilson | William Julius Wilson | Paul Wilson | John Marius Wilson | Jackie Wilson | Cassandra Wilson | Steven Wilson | Gahan Wilson | Colin Meloy | Wilson Phillips | Carl Wilson | Richard Wilson (Scottish actor) | Mount Wilson Observatory |
Gestalt have published the work of many well-known creators, including Shaun Tan, James Barclay, Colin Wilson, Tom Taylor, Terry Dowling and Justin Randall.
Leung has a Star Wars character named after him (Lar Le'ung, a Jedi Knight) in the 2009 Star Wars comic book series Star Wars: Invasion, written by Tom Taylor and illustrated by Colin Wilson.
The lectures give members of the public the opportunity to question and discuss with internationally-known philosophers who have included as Simon Blackburn, Antony Flew, Piers Benn, Jonathan Glover, Anthony Grayling, Ted Honderich, Moshe Machover, Nicholas Maxwell, Mary Margaret McCabe, Mary Midgley, David Papineau, Janet Radcliffe Richards, Barry C. Smith, Jo Wolff, Raymond Tallis, and Colin Wilson.
In 2003, a group of admirers of his work calling themselves "The Sons of T.C. Lethbridge" (Doggen Foster, Kevlar Bales and Welbourn Tekh), with the aid of Julian Cope and Colin Wilson, released A Giant: The Definitive T.C. Lethbridge, a set containing a booklet and two CDs containing music accompanying discussions of Lethbridge's work.
Nine year old Bruce Colin Wilson was then abducted and his body was found in May 1975 near Risdon Vale.
This was followed by an avant garde novel, KNOCK (1975), described in the Foreword by Colin Wilson as a work that "belongs to an Irish tradition that runs from Charles Lever and Samuel Lover, down through Joyce, Beckett and Donleavy".