More like 3.5 Another solidly written entry into what I would describe as the SF/horror world he created with the Drowning God. We pick up with our three reluctant monster hunters some time after the events of the previous book. We are given to understand that they have been roaming the islands putting down supernatural incidents living a vagabond lifestyle. Enter their latest case, a truly chilling series of murders, dubbed the Jellyfish murders (as all the victims have been stripped of their bones). The opening chapters were really gruesome and haunting.
While I still feel that I don't really know any of our main three characters well, or what drives them, I did like that Kendley continues to expand their understanding of their role. It seemed perhaps they were simply fated to fight monsters being in the right place, at the right time. Now it seems that they each might be more than simply human, and I enjoyed the way the author is developing those aspects. Counselor Endo of the sinister Zenkoku organization reappears and more on that theme is also developed.
I wasn't sure if it would be worth continuing the series, but I am drawn enough to the plots and mysteries, even if I have no great attachment to the characters. I look forward to reading the next book, focusing, I assume on Mori as the other two (Takuda and Suzuki) have each gotten their own book now.