This is a very likable book! True, there's an excess of small-scale Victorian portraiture—a piece of schtick that keeps getting expanded upon with each embiggened reissue—but all the stories are good reads, and the artwork keeps getting better as it goes. The variety of what you get, all by Mignola's own hand, is wonderful. ‘The Magician and the Snake’ was also featured in the library edition of Hellboy in Hell, but I enjoyed re-reading it here in more humble, supportive environs, where it begins to co-inhabit a mythology defined by these loosely interrelated stories; in fact, Mignola's intro suggests this book would make an appropriate companion to H in H, as both are efforts by the author to be more himself in drawing what he loves.
In addition to the extra stash of Victorian portraits, this edition includes Axorr, Slayer of Demons, an inspired piece of sword & sorcery nonsense (w/flying octopus) that somehow never reached the dialog stage—just B&W line art, no text and no color. That's what I mean about variety, a taste of something a little different to enliven the palate; not quite an Artisan Edition in its presentation, but close. (Readers are not invited to, but could, in theory, attempt to script or color this unpublished effort—that's right, kids, it's an unofficial Mike Mignola Try-Out Book!) It certainly doesn't hurt that this book's distinctive hardcover format (8.25" x 12.25") matches others like Hellboy: The First 20 Years. It's a winner, in my opinion.
BTW, I agree with another reviewer that there were ink smudges in the title story—and even a nasty scratch on a key splash page. (And my copy arrived shrink-wrapped and unopened, in pristine condition.) Fortunately, it didn't affect the balance of the material.