In the third volume, it looks like Marvel Comics, or at least Thor, is brought in to balance out all of the DC characters from the last volume, with Dr. Blake’s walking cane one of many weapon-retrieval devices (in his case, a golden hammer).
More public domain characters are brought in, too: Dr. Frankenstein, Dracula. Elija Snow seems extraordinarily powerful. Dracula is “the greatest of strategists. Not a mind like his to be found anywhere else on the planet.” He falls prey to Elijah Snow’s standard and fairly obvious strategy within a few panels of showing up behind Sherlock Holmes. Despite Holmes’s obvious inability to recognize the elementary facts, Snow chooses to train with the great detective for five years, which, fortunately, we are not subjected to.
Tarzan and Wells are probably the most interesting part of this volume; Wells mainly because he shows up only obliquely.
This was the last of the volumes I read; if I hadn’t bought them all at once I probably wouldn’t have gone past the first one, and definitely not past the second. I’m reviewing them now mainly to remind myself of how much and why I disliked them. The story sounds like something I’d enjoy a lot: the secret histories of Tim Powers, the re-evaluation of famous characters of Alan Moore and Grant Morrison, and even the amazing writing of the guy who gave us Transmetropolitan. But for me at least, the story doesn’t do anything with those elements and the characters aren’t interesting enough to make up for it.