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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great addition to the Necroscope series!
Necroscope: The Lost Years is a great book that really added spice to the rest of the series. It cleared up any spots you might have mis-understood earlier in the series. It's about a man who can talk to the dead and also has the ability to teleport himself through space and time. It has a very good story line and Brian Lumley made a good decision when he decided to...
Published on November 10, 1998

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A sequel which was best left undone
Brian Lumley's Necroscope books are certainly engrossing and very enjoyable to read. All the other books in the series, at least, apart from the two Lost Years novels. They look promising enough by the blurbs on the back: the Necroscope is caught up in a struggle between evil vampire lords. Now, given how cool Thibor Ferenczy was in the original, this sounded great. But...
Published on January 1, 2003 by Frosted


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A sequel which was best left undone, January 1, 2003
Brian Lumley's Necroscope books are certainly engrossing and very enjoyable to read. All the other books in the series, at least, apart from the two Lost Years novels. They look promising enough by the blurbs on the back: the Necroscope is caught up in a struggle between evil vampire lords. Now, given how cool Thibor Ferenczy was in the original, this sounded great. But it turns out to move incredibly slowly. The first part of this book is focused on an event that could have been condensed to a much smaller size and the book would have been better off. After that, it starts to get better, with three vampire clans all conspiring to kill each other off and take over the world, but then winds down to an incredibly slow pace, with little happening but talk of 'when I rise up from my eternal slumber' and 'when I've got enough demon-bats' and worst of all, 'when I feel like it' from the vampire lords, and with an extremely confusing series of events from Harry Keogh's point of view left me very disappointed after how much I enjoyed the other books in the series.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great addition to the Necroscope series!, November 10, 1998
By A Customer
Necroscope: The Lost Years is a great book that really added spice to the rest of the series. It cleared up any spots you might have mis-understood earlier in the series. It's about a man who can talk to the dead and also has the ability to teleport himself through space and time. It has a very good story line and Brian Lumley made a good decision when he decided to continue the series. I've been reading this series for a couple months now and ceased to amaze me how luring and attractive that book is to read. You put the book down and you want to pick it right back up. I suggest reading this book. You won't regret it.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Necroscope, November 8, 2000
By 
Fadrah (Idaho, USA) - See all my reviews
The whole Necroscope series has kept me on the edge of my seat just waiting for the next book to be released. The first book will get you hooked. Brian Lumley has a way of combining history and mythology to get his own very unique version of the vampire world. I have become very attached to the main character Harry Keogh, his assosiation with the E-branch, and the many colorful charaters that Lumly has painted through his masterful creation of alternate reality.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lumley has mastered the human psyche!, January 7, 1998
By A Customer
Brian Lumley masterfully spins a web of
spellbinding terror and mystical places in
which Harry Keogh finds himself in the middle.
Keoegh gets caught up in a whirlwind of horror
while trying to search for his wife and son. A
brilliant masterpiece!
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5.0 out of 5 stars best author, August 8, 2011
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these are good books love to read them, he keeps you involved and you just cant believe what is happening sometimes. His amagination is awesome. read it and love it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Addition to the Series, March 24, 2010
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Brian Lumey's Necroscope series is one of the best horror/sci-fi book series of all time. The first five novels in the series (`Necroscope', `Wamphyri', `The Source', `Deadspeak', and `Deadspawn') chronicle the life of Harry Keogh, a man whose ability to communicate with the dead has garnered him the title Necroscope. `The Lost Years', alongside its direct sequel `Resurgence', takes a close look at the eight "lost" years that occurred between `Wamphyri' and `The Source'.

It's important to note that you shouldn't read this book unless you're already acquainted with the original series. `The Lost Years' not only provides spoilers, but also draws heavily on events, places, and characters from the first five novels. Unlike previous installments, it also ends with the "TO BE CONTINUED" hook. Thus, if you're a newcomer to the Necroscope universe, I'd advise you to avoid `The Lost Years' and get your hands on `Necroscope' instead.

That being said, `The Lost Years' is a great addition to the original series. It expands on Keogh himself, showing his struggle to get used to his new body and his attempts to find his wife and child. It adds a lot of depth to the history of the wamphyri, further fleshes out the Ferenczy dynasty, establishes its own version of Dracula, and introduces werewolves into the setting. All these backstories and subplots serve to enhance the main story - that of the blood feud between three ancient wamphyri families.

The literary style, while above average, is far from flawless. Lumley is too fond of the "there are vampires and there are vampires" word play, and uses it too often in both narration and dialogue. Dialogues sometimes sound wooden and/or cartoony. This is especially glaring when there's lots of exposition going on.

Characterization is done masterfully for the most part. The wamphyri deserve a special mention as an example of complete monsters done well. By all rights, their sadistic, traitorous, baby-eating villainy should've come off as ridiculous and one-dimensional. However, Lumley spends considerable time developing their personalities and giving them in-depth histories and motivations, thus creating an entire race of extremely malevolent yet at the same time highly believable abominations. That he also uses the wamphyri leeches as symbols for the evil that lurks within a man's soul (Shaitan the Unborn - the greatest of the wamphyri and Lumley's stand-in for Satan - is himself a massive leech) only serves to add to their complexity and sheer awesomeness.

`The Lost Years' is a fast paced, intelligent, and highly entertaining horror/sci-fi novel. The writing is less then stellar, but the quality of the setting and the plot more then makes up for any stylistic failings. Newcomers beware; Brian Lumley's books aren't for the faint-hearted. The entire `Necroscope' series is cynical, bloody, and chock-full of nightmare fuel. I've read hundreds of gory novels - anything from tame H. P. Lovecraft and Anne Rice stuff, to Clive Barker and Brett Easton Ellis slaughter fests - and even I found some parts of `The Lost Years' disturbing. The scene with the innocent acolyte and the ice blocks, with its horrifying depiction of fear and helplessness, has been haunting me for days now.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Brian Lumley any thing pertaining 2 him, February 2, 2008
I'm N love with anything he writes,wish he would make mini series movies 2 each book he writes ,love every gory detail.He needs 2 make them come alive. Thanks, I curl up with u every night.
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4.0 out of 5 stars a little uneven but satisfying, September 15, 2007
By 
Michael (New York City) - See all my reviews
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This chapter in the engrossing necro-saga, starts off strong, then gets a little iffy in the ensuing 100 pages regarding the metting of Harry and BJ. Then you get to the history of Radu Lykan and boy does it ever take off. I was totaly gripped with this piece of history. It's as good as anything written previously in the series. I'm so into all these stories that I recently purchased the remaining books. I'm blown away with Lumley's skill at continuity in this series..moving the story forward with a keen eye on the past and filling in missing pieces in between. Brilliant,and engrossing.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book adds meat to the Necroscope series, June 27, 1997
By A Customer
After reading the first seven books in this remarkable series, I thought that all that could be said was, then The Lost Years came out. This book deffinately filled in all the gaps in the life of Harry, and the various vampire lords that survived in our world.
The one entry that shows how much these lords hated each other, was when a small german town was bombed during the second world war, for not other reason than the fact that a vampire lord was suspected of living in this area.
There was so much information in this book, but yet it still explained the things that shaped and helped flesh out the man simply known as Harry. For those that have read this series of books, I certainly recomend that they read this book, it will explain a lot of the things that were left to speculation. This book is a must read.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars :-O Ugh!, December 11, 2009
By 
B. Einhorn (New York City, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I must have requested the wrong book from the library, and started with one of the later books. It was so-so for the first 5 pages, then rapidly fell off. The story was silly, and I rapidly lost interest. The only reason I forced myself to continue reading is I was commuting by train and had nothing else to read.
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Necroscope: The Lost Years
Necroscope: The Lost Years by Brian Lumley (Paperback - 1995)
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