Using the strength given to him by Psychomech to restore his dead lover to life and vanquish his enemies, Richard Garrison soon learns of the Psychosphere, another plane where mental powers rule. Original.
Brian Lumley was born near Newcastle. In 22 years as a Military Policeman he served in many of the Cold War hotspots, including Berlin, as well as Cyprus in partition days. He reached the rank of Sergeant-Major before retiring to Devon to write full-time, and his work was first published in 1970. The vampire series, 'Necroscope', has been translated into ten languages and sold over a million copies worldwide.
He was awarded the World Fantasy Life Achievement Award in 2010.
Ridiculous, profoundly sexist, generally not PC at all, but also pretty entertaining. A horror spy thriller about a psychic battle between two wizards, or something that amounts to it. Two absurdly rich assholes abuse their power and their wealth on nearly every page. Would have preferred more shoot outs however and the ending isn’t quite as strong as the first.
While the world was still interesting, the characters seemed even flatter than in the first book. There also seemed to be some pointless distrust and antagonism between some of the characters as well. Also, much like the first book, the “big bad” really wasn’t all that powerful, it was mostly characters getting in their own way.
So here's Literary Life Lesson #38: When shopping at the used book store, a big stack of the same title should be a warning sign. . .
Just so far removed in quality of storytelling, and story itself from what we've enjoyed and come to expect from the Necroscope series, the whole Psycho series seems to fall short.
While the first book was a decent Act I, Psychosphere falls short on every level of reading:
> Poor continuity from the last book, and the cold introduction of new characters and plot with no flow whatsoever from where we left off. > Lumley's storytelling style itself is stilted and amateurish in this work, delivering a book that's boring to read, hard to follow, too visually abstract in it's "dream sequences" to follow on the printed page, and just clumsy throughout. > The evoloution of the premise of Garrison's psychic abilities surges so far into the extreme in this book that it forces the reader well past the "temporary suspension of disbelief" that is necessary to enjoy all science & fantasy fiction, and all the way out tosuch an extreme that only the clinically insane could successfully suspend enough disbelief to enjoy the story. [SPOILER ALERT: "Becoming God" really sort of closes the door on any enjoyment or sense of anticipation by the reader] > Character development and interaction actually seems to regress from book one, with 4 stories about 4 people, only loosely connected by circumstance, rather than effectively intertwined in the story plot.
Finally, the paperback edition includes a Chapter One preview of the third book. Having come 2/3 of the way along, I have to finish the trilogy, but based on Chapter One, I'm not looking forward to the experience at all.
3 used books for $7.25 is not a bad deal, but if an asteroid is going to hit the planet, these books will not be on my list of great works to be preserved. . .