As stated in my The Complete Lew Brown, Vol 1 review (see May post), I believe the titular character is artist/writer Larry Johnson's "everyman" alter ego, and Johnson has used this surrogate in several exploits, including his noted anthology, Tales of Fantasy, and his superhero novel, The Hand.
Within Johnson's engaging tapestry, Brown is an affable reporter who, for all intent, enters Twilight Zone-ish sectors, on occasion rendered with Kolchak/X-Files spins. For the 220-pg (black-and-white) The Complete Lew Brown, Vol 2, these elements emerge as a series of ornate, comic-book adventures and a set of captivating short stories.
The comics feature an allegiance between alien races (one with a doll-like semblance and the other adorned by antennae) to conquer Earth; Brown's acquaintance, Madame Boogala, and her pact with a thieving genie; a woman who's eager to paint Brown's portrait, though with a Dorian Gray twist; Brown's astral-projection trip with the charismatic Concordus, Chief of Spirit Magic; Boogala's influence on Brown's rare, dance-partner statues and the subsequent sector where a monster plant thrives; Boogala hurling Brown back into the arms of his old girlfriend, Marie (but is she the gal he knew and loved?); Brown's visit to a haunted tower, teeming of anxious artists; Brown's admission into eerie, "Seeing Eye" therapy; the return of Marie, though now exposed as something beyond human; a crystal ball harboring a spidery specimen that pulls people into its dimension; and Brown's quest for an artist named Thaddeus Cromwell, in what becomes a crafty homage to H.P. Lovecraft's "Pickman's Model."
The short stories embellish the comics, with "Escape Too" centering on Brown's trip to a welcoming yet mind-bending inn, capped by a Boogala surprise, and "The Aurorans" (first featured in Fantastic Tales), where Brown goes the extra mile to extract his brother, Freddy, from an ethereal cult.
In addition to Freddy and Boogala, the volume includes Boogala's obedient son, Goomar, Brown's eccentric neighbors, Joe and Francine Carbone, and therapist Dr. Charles Young, who acts as a soothing springboard and host for several of the enclosed conundrums. In addition, Crow's Curios (a hub similar to Friday the 13th: The Series' Curious Goods) weaves its way throughout, as does its proprietor, Alistair Crowe, who clinches Brown's revisits and as such, his encounters with the unknown.
On the surface, Johnson/Brown's exploits are breezy, but beneath, they nurture foreboding nuggets. Our hero's reactions to those nuggets are what makes the concept click. Brown is far from being Doctor Strange or Doctor Fate, but his humble designation makes him more identifiable (and all the braver for it) as he overcomes the absurdities he's dealt. Like so many of us, he faces obstacles that wish to thwart him, and like so many of us, he does his utmost to derail them, even as Johnson brackets the situations with phantasmagoric trimmings.
I like The Complete Lew Brown, Vol 2 as much as Vol 1, so in my estimation, Johnson has achieved what few have done: dispatched a sequel that matches the original. On this basis, it doesn't matter whether one starts with Vol 2 or Vol 1. Both Lew Brown volumes deliver oodles of relatable wonderment.
One can order The Complete Lew Brown, Vol 2 at
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H4NW6435?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title
and Vol 1 at
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GXTLP6HM?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title