Necroscope (Necroscope #1) (1986)

by Brian Lumley



During the Cold War, two men from opposite sides of the Iron Curtain, both with access to the dead, head for a showdown.

 


Englishman Harry Keogh can interact with them in a respectful manner that the dead find pleasant. 



Romanian Boris Dragosani rips secrets from the dead, literally tearing into the bodies and fondling or consuming the pieces, an experience that they find excruciating.

 


In his search for power , Dragonsani will encounter and negotiate with a long-buried vampire. 



Apparently, Brian Lumley lacked the discipline to kill his darlings during the editing process.

 

Brian Lumley


He definitely spends too much time on extraneous backstory, at one point even reproducing mathematical formulas during a sequence in which Harry is impressing his teachers with his natural “genius” (acquired, of course, from a deceased mathematician in a nearby graveyard).

 

"Necroscope" (Polish)


Judging from the thickness of future volumes of this series, that isn’t going to change, but I can honestly say that I was rarely bored by it, as unnecessary as it may have been.

 

"Necroscope" (Czech)


Lumley has an interesting take on the nature of vampires, and I’m excited to see how it plays out. 


"Necroscope" (Greek)

"Necroscope" (French)

"Resurrection" (German)

"The One Who Talks to the Dead" (Spanish)


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