This is the sixth Necroscope book I've read, and in all the vampire and werewolf stories I always assumed Lumley had a stash of stories about other supernatural evils that Harry battles against. Glad I was right.
Really enjoyed this book. The first story, "For The Dead Travel Slowly," was my favorite. Seeing Jimmy Collins again was fun, and reminiscing about them taking down that bully Stanley Green. I felt the tone of this story was much closer to the first Necroscope book. At first I assumed the creature in the Hazeldene forest was a vampire. I was surprised when it turned out to be a monster tree, but the evil was very well-written and defined.
I also enjoyed the mentions of B.J., even though I've already read the Lost Years, Part Two, so I know what happens to her.
One of Lumley's strengths in writing is the ability of his characters to dig through history to find the truth. We've seen Harry do it several times, especially when tracking Boris Dragosani. The way Greg Miller in this story tracked the disappearances from Hazeldene back thousands of years was cool and kept me turning the pages to see what happened.
The battle against the nameless evil was great, with Harry being triumphant.
The second story, "Harry and the Pirates," was good, but it never seemed to go anywhere. My expectations were too high, I think. When Harry began talking to Billy Browen and Erik, I was expecting a wild story where Harry had to travel back in time to be on the same ship these two were on when they were alive. Hunting for treasure, and seeing Harry use the Mobius Continuum to jump between attacking ships. That would have been amazing.
Instead, the story focused on an alien being in the form of a golden cloth or sheet, that sucked the life out of anyone who touched it. And of course the pirate last entrapped in the golden coil is buried right in Hartlepool Cemetery. Seemed a little too convenient. But hey, I enjoyed it. I kept waiting for something exciting to happen, but for most of the story, Harry either sat on the sea wall listening to Erik, or sat on Billy's grave marker listening to this pirate's story.
But I realize Harry doesn't have to use his powers in every story, and sometimes, things are just really strange. One thing that Lumley doesn't address, is Harry's feelings about humanity clearly not being alone. The vampires from Sunside/Starside is one thing, but now there are two aliens in this book, not from Earth, who've both been malevolent and evil. It must weigh down Harry to know that so much evil is against him, with very little good. He must be completely demoralized. Except at this point B.J. Mirlu has him under her spell, so I'm sure he's feeling no emotional pain.
The final story, "Old Man with a Blade," was a good reminder that Harry is not meant to die in this world, and may, in fact, live forever. Death is definitely hunting us all. At least we know Harry may beat him yet.