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Parasite

Parasite

byMira Grant
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
Rick O
5.0 out of 5 starsAbout a third of the way into this novel...
Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2013
About a third of the way into this novel, I became aware of the dreaded words on page 502, “To be continued…” Mira Grant, are you kidding me? I don’t like reading trilogies unless all three books are available to read now. By the time the next novel comes out, I will have forgotten this one. I know that I can go to Wikipedia for a recap, but most of the time I’ve already lost interest. Oh well, I should have been aware of her tendencies with the previously published, 'The Newsflesh Trilogy' . Okay, enough said. The first novel is a success, but it makes the reader wonder if these ‘tapewormed- sleepwalkers’ are going to morph into ordinary zombies. Mira, don’t do it, because what you have here is a fresh idea that should only get better in book two and three. I, for one, am tired of zombie novels. Keep your thoughts on what you started and develop it further. Your last chapter was dynamite waiting to ignite. I thought that was where the story was heading, but I wasn’t sure. The future readers will know what I’m talking about after they get to the end of this intoxicating work.

It seems that SymboGen Corporation has developed a tapeworm that once implanted into a human body shields the person from sickness and actually dispenses drugs to fight any disease. Dr. Banks, Dr. Jablonsky and Dr. Shanti Cale are the three architects of this ‘Intestinal Bodyguard’ that has been ingested by most of the population. The year is 2027. The protagonist is Sally Mitchell, who had a horrible car accident, which left her in a near plug-pulling state, until her tapeworm somehow pulled her out of her coma. She was twenty at the time of the crash, and now six years have passed. She has no memory of her first twenty years and had to be re-taught everything as if she were a baby. Dr. Banks of SymboGen has taken an interest in her case and monitors her health and life at no expense to Sal (she changed her name since she has no memory of her first twenty years). Sal has a Dr. Bank’s arranged job at a animal shelter and has a boyfriend, Dr. Nathan Kim, who is a parasitologist at a San Francisco hospital. Sal has ‘night terror dreams’ of being in a hot and warm dark place with the distant sound of drums. Nonetheless, all’s well until she and Nathan run into a strange man and his dog in a park. He seems to be suddenly aggressive while sleepwalking. Sal and Nathan leave with the dog, who becomes their lovable pet named Beverly. Dr. Kim finds out that there are many similar cases nationwide. He discovers that a wand with a purple light run over your skin can detect whether you have an parasite infection, or not.

Meanwhile Dr. Shanti Cole has disappeared. Dr. Jablonsky has committed suicide. What’s going on? Sal and Nathan meet the mysterious Adam and Tansy. Who are they and why does Adam call Nathan... brother? Are implants taking over their human host? Sal’s father, Colonel Alfred Mitchell, director of research at a U.S. Army research institute for infectious diseases gets involved in a big way. So in book one, Mira Grant has introduced the eight to ten main characters (good job). We know that the originally beneficial tapeworms seem to be revolting and taking over the brains of some human host. We suspect that there is a chief tapeworm, but I will not guess who that is at this time, although I think I know who it is. This is a well written piece of horror/urban fantasy from Seanan McGuire (writing as Mira Grant). She managed to keep me wide awake and feeling empathy for the characters while reading this thriller. A writer can’t do any better than that. I highly recommend this novel, but with the caveat that two more books are coming before we meet the denouement.
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11 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
M. Lie
3.0 out of 5 starsUnderwhelmed, but the concept is interesting
Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2013
I got hooked on the Newsflesh trilogy when I accidentally picked up Feed only days after it's release, and I stuck with the series through its admittedly varying quality. Even though the story had some issues, I really loved a few key things about that universe, especially how much effort had been put into making the scenario a believable one, a rarity in a genre where an overwhelming amount of the stories are about Strong Men Surviving The Mysterious Zombie Apocalypse Armed Only With Their Bare Hands

Where Feed started off well and had me hooked to the end of the book, however, I have to say my interest in Parasite waned quickly throughout the book, although I still finished it in four hours. It doesn't take long to have most things in the book figured out, due to the rather excessive hand-holding it's also no fun at all as it requires no need to think. More things could have been left a little more shrouded in mystery here. To be honest I wasn't all that wild about the main character, who to me eventually really just became an annoyance I had to ignore to get to the good parts.

And there are good parts. The dialog is occasionally snappy and entertaining, especially when the character Tansy comes into play, the excepts from the children's book are appropriately creepy (and the premise of that children's book is actually very intriguing), great pain has been taken to make sure that you can properly believe that this could happen, and I still admire Ms Grant so much for this. I might not always be bowled over by the story itself, but I never feel like the concept was made up on a whim and I'm being told to simply accept that things are as they are and get on with it. The creation of the parasite. the marketing, the integration in every day life, splendidly done.

It's only such a pity I don't care for Sally Mitchell, who happens to be the main character. Her story isn't particularly intriguing, she seems half comatose, one quarter bohoo-poor-me and a quarter oh hell I'm supposed to be a believeably adult-ish character, better get back to that pronto. The romance is forced, at best, although not quite as bad as it was in Blackout. The boyfriend is far too convenient, as a character he is also unbelievable and quite frankly boring.

If you read and liked Newsflesh, I would recommend this, a lot of the things you liked in that trilogy are probably present here. I hope that in difference to Newsflesh that this series improves with each new book, and that like Newsflesh we'll be treated to some fabulous novellas. Despite this not being my new favorite book, I will still eagerly await the next one, desperately hoping the delightful Tansy will be back to charm me further.
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From the United States

Rick O
5.0 out of 5 stars About a third of the way into this novel...
Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2013
Verified Purchase
About a third of the way into this novel, I became aware of the dreaded words on page 502, “To be continued…” Mira Grant, are you kidding me? I don’t like reading trilogies unless all three books are available to read now. By the time the next novel comes out, I will have forgotten this one. I know that I can go to Wikipedia for a recap, but most of the time I’ve already lost interest. Oh well, I should have been aware of her tendencies with the previously published, 'The Newsflesh Trilogy' . Okay, enough said. The first novel is a success, but it makes the reader wonder if these ‘tapewormed- sleepwalkers’ are going to morph into ordinary zombies. Mira, don’t do it, because what you have here is a fresh idea that should only get better in book two and three. I, for one, am tired of zombie novels. Keep your thoughts on what you started and develop it further. Your last chapter was dynamite waiting to ignite. I thought that was where the story was heading, but I wasn’t sure. The future readers will know what I’m talking about after they get to the end of this intoxicating work.

It seems that SymboGen Corporation has developed a tapeworm that once implanted into a human body shields the person from sickness and actually dispenses drugs to fight any disease. Dr. Banks, Dr. Jablonsky and Dr. Shanti Cale are the three architects of this ‘Intestinal Bodyguard’ that has been ingested by most of the population. The year is 2027. The protagonist is Sally Mitchell, who had a horrible car accident, which left her in a near plug-pulling state, until her tapeworm somehow pulled her out of her coma. She was twenty at the time of the crash, and now six years have passed. She has no memory of her first twenty years and had to be re-taught everything as if she were a baby. Dr. Banks of SymboGen has taken an interest in her case and monitors her health and life at no expense to Sal (she changed her name since she has no memory of her first twenty years). Sal has a Dr. Bank’s arranged job at a animal shelter and has a boyfriend, Dr. Nathan Kim, who is a parasitologist at a San Francisco hospital. Sal has ‘night terror dreams’ of being in a hot and warm dark place with the distant sound of drums. Nonetheless, all’s well until she and Nathan run into a strange man and his dog in a park. He seems to be suddenly aggressive while sleepwalking. Sal and Nathan leave with the dog, who becomes their lovable pet named Beverly. Dr. Kim finds out that there are many similar cases nationwide. He discovers that a wand with a purple light run over your skin can detect whether you have an parasite infection, or not.

Meanwhile Dr. Shanti Cole has disappeared. Dr. Jablonsky has committed suicide. What’s going on? Sal and Nathan meet the mysterious Adam and Tansy. Who are they and why does Adam call Nathan... brother? Are implants taking over their human host? Sal’s father, Colonel Alfred Mitchell, director of research at a U.S. Army research institute for infectious diseases gets involved in a big way. So in book one, Mira Grant has introduced the eight to ten main characters (good job). We know that the originally beneficial tapeworms seem to be revolting and taking over the brains of some human host. We suspect that there is a chief tapeworm, but I will not guess who that is at this time, although I think I know who it is. This is a well written piece of horror/urban fantasy from Seanan McGuire (writing as Mira Grant). She managed to keep me wide awake and feeling empathy for the characters while reading this thriller. A writer can’t do any better than that. I highly recommend this novel, but with the caveat that two more books are coming before we meet the denouement.
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Morgan Cahall
4.0 out of 5 stars Parasite: The Next Level of Health care: Extinction
Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2015
Verified Purchase
The Setup (Overview):

In the near future health care has become almost universally standardized. A company by the name of SymboGen has found away to take one of nature's more pesky parasites and turn it into a revolutionary way of delivering medicine. There is almost no down sides and millions have been saved that might have other wised perished. In the case of one one woman the SymboGen treatment may even have brought her back from the the dead. Of course this is an unexpected side effect, one that SymboGen doesn't quite understand so they are very eager, or very worried, and want to find an explanation as soon as possible. This is the story of Sally Mitchell, the girl who came back.

The Story(Some Story Details):

Sally Mitchell was not the nicest person in the world before her accident. While her SymboGen implant saved her body from the effects of getting T-Boned by a semi-truck, it didn't quite stop her brain from getting banged around a bit. In fact she doesn't remember anything at all from her past. Which is why she prefers to be called Sal now since she's apparently a completely opposite person now. It has taken Sal almost two years to make up all the progress she lost due to the accident.

She is ready to move on with her life but SymboGen still hasn't gotten the answers they wanted. There is also some lingering side effects that no one can quite explain. While some might normal, like nightmare's, there are others such as severe allergy reactions that could be deadly. So Sal puts up with the continuing tests whether she likes it or not.

Everything changes though when a strange new sickness starts to spread across the country. It causes normal people to act as if they are suddenly sleep walking. The victims start out docile but eventually they become aggressive, almost as if they are hunting something. As the sickness accelerates it seems that SymboGen might not have been quite as beneficial as they seemed.

The answers lie locked in the head of Sal Mitchell. Now she and her ragtag group of friends and unlikely allies must delve into the shrouded history of SymboGen to find the truth behind what was thought to be the miracle of the century.

Conclusion(My Overall Opinion on the Story):

This was a pretty good read. The story moves a pretty good clip, it does get a little fast toward the end as this is the first book in the trilogy so the next book needs to get it's story arc's setup. It's not really that distracting, just after a certain point in the book there are a few “and then!” moments. The story may remind some of “The Host”, while there are a few similarities the idea has more to do with the “humans mess nature's plan and that's a bad idea” concept than anything else. The characters are also interesting for the most part. Just about everyone has more than meets the eye to them or most likely will in the sequel. If your interested in thrillers that have a side of “mysterious virus may destroy the world” or you liked the “news flesh trilogy” give this one a read. m.a.c
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G. Messersmith
VINE VOICE
5.0 out of 5 stars Worms on the Brain!
Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2013
Verified Purchase
The chapters are mixed with news releases, autobiographical material, journal entries, and even quotes from a children's book which are connected to what is going on. At times this is very annoying and at other times it was quite useful to understanding what is gong on. The book is set in a future not to remote from ours 2027 and everyone is having a parasite put inside them. This parasite takes care of all your health problems: diabetic no more insulin shots for you, your parasite will regulate your body; birth control no need to worry your parasite will keep you from getting pregnant; in fact, no need to take any kind of medicine ever again because your parasite will keep you healthy. Sound too good to be true? Well it turns out it is. People start getting sick with something named the sleeping sickness, where, they first begin to shamble about, then fall into a coma and then later become very aggressive and start trying to kill other people. In other words, they become very zombie like.

The protagonist of this novel is Sally Mitchell, a young woman who had a terrible car accident and was essentially brain dead until a parasite was injected into her and she regained consciousness. The problem is she is nothing like the young woman she had been before the accident. In fact, she has no memory of her former life. She can't even speak a single language so she has to relearn English. When we meet her she has been out of her coma for 6 years and is dating a doctor (no not one of hers) and is resentful she has to go to a psychiatrist, as well as get checked out by the corporation who injected her with the parasite every six months. Her parents have legal guardianship over her although technically she is a grown woman, she only has 6 years of life experience.

The other characters in the book are just as good, if not better, than Sally. They are a diverse group, for example, Sally's father is a Colonel in the U.S. Army and a doctor who works at a research lab. Her boyfriend, Nathan, is the foremost expert in parasitology which is terribly helpful when Sally starts trying to figure out what is causing everyone to go all zombie. Her sister, Joyce, who she evidently didn't get along with before her accident becomes her best friend. Then there are the people she works at the animal shelter with, Will and Tasha. Not to mention a couple of adorable dogs mixed in with the rest and you have a very lovable group.

Overall this was an enormously enjoyable read, considerably well-written and highly recommended.
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M. Lie
3.0 out of 5 stars Underwhelmed, but the concept is interesting
Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2013
Verified Purchase
I got hooked on the Newsflesh trilogy when I accidentally picked up Feed only days after it's release, and I stuck with the series through its admittedly varying quality. Even though the story had some issues, I really loved a few key things about that universe, especially how much effort had been put into making the scenario a believable one, a rarity in a genre where an overwhelming amount of the stories are about Strong Men Surviving The Mysterious Zombie Apocalypse Armed Only With Their Bare Hands

Where Feed started off well and had me hooked to the end of the book, however, I have to say my interest in Parasite waned quickly throughout the book, although I still finished it in four hours. It doesn't take long to have most things in the book figured out, due to the rather excessive hand-holding it's also no fun at all as it requires no need to think. More things could have been left a little more shrouded in mystery here. To be honest I wasn't all that wild about the main character, who to me eventually really just became an annoyance I had to ignore to get to the good parts.

And there are good parts. The dialog is occasionally snappy and entertaining, especially when the character Tansy comes into play, the excepts from the children's book are appropriately creepy (and the premise of that children's book is actually very intriguing), great pain has been taken to make sure that you can properly believe that this could happen, and I still admire Ms Grant so much for this. I might not always be bowled over by the story itself, but I never feel like the concept was made up on a whim and I'm being told to simply accept that things are as they are and get on with it. The creation of the parasite. the marketing, the integration in every day life, splendidly done.

It's only such a pity I don't care for Sally Mitchell, who happens to be the main character. Her story isn't particularly intriguing, she seems half comatose, one quarter bohoo-poor-me and a quarter oh hell I'm supposed to be a believeably adult-ish character, better get back to that pronto. The romance is forced, at best, although not quite as bad as it was in Blackout. The boyfriend is far too convenient, as a character he is also unbelievable and quite frankly boring.

If you read and liked Newsflesh, I would recommend this, a lot of the things you liked in that trilogy are probably present here. I hope that in difference to Newsflesh that this series improves with each new book, and that like Newsflesh we'll be treated to some fabulous novellas. Despite this not being my new favorite book, I will still eagerly await the next one, desperately hoping the delightful Tansy will be back to charm me further.
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FoxysMom
4.0 out of 5 stars Mad Science, Creepy Fun!
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2014
Verified Purchase
Parasite is the future. As humanity tries to scrub and sterilize every surface they and their children might encounter, they reduce their bodies’ tolerance for allergens. SymboGen, pharmaceutical pioneers, design a solution for the world heath crisis. They've genetically altered a tapeworm to combat allergies, diseases, and even act as birth control. All you've got to do is swallow one little pill, every couple of years. What could go wrong?

Main character, Sally Mitchell becomes the poster child for SymboGen, after almost dying in a car accident and being saved by her patented Intestinal Bodyguard. One problem: When she wakes up from her coma she has know idea who she is, who her family is, or what they're saying to her because she's also forgotten English. Six years later, Sally Mitchell is still an amnesiac living under the thumb of Big-Pharma and it isn't easy. They treat her like a lab rat and expect her to behave, while her family treats her like a child because the old Sally is gone and this one has only been alive for six years. All this pales in comparison to a mysterious pandemic afflicting people who aren't supposed to get sick anymore.

The tone of Sally Mitchell's voice is different from anything I've read in awhile. She speaks and thinks "young" in some ways because all she has is six years. However, she isn't stupid, she's learning fast, and her past traumas and current predicaments make her emotionally older than most. Her boyfriend Nathan appears to be the only one in Sally's life who sees her, trusts her, and is honest with her. This last thing is important, because as the plot-line increases in intensity it becomes abundantly clear, that everyone is lying to Sally about something. And the more they lie, the more determined she is to find out the truth. And I don't blame her one bit, because there are points where the lies and the manipulations flow so heavy, I actually got angry on her behalf. Who the hell are these people to say they have her interests at heart, when they haven't actually asked her what her best interests are? And who is Mira Grant, to make me look like a crazy person, yelling away at fictional characters? Then I took a deep breath to calm myself and read on, desperate to see how Sally handles each new deceit.

As a fan of Mira Grant's, I had high expectations for this book going in: I wasn't disappointed! She should get an award for coming up with creative ways for mad scientists to screw humanity. I found Sally Mitchell to be a compelling, oddly relatable, and occasionally frightening character. Her family is infuriating, the science sickening, and the conspiracy she finds herself unraveling is exactly why curiosity killed the cat. I couldn't put this book down. There were points that were creepy and gross, points where I cringed and felt as if I needed to shower with a sandpaper loufa. There were points that were frightening and heartbreaking. And at the end, I've got two big questions: What will she do now? And did her dad know?

I am horrified that I have to wait for a sequel... I want it now!
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Story
Reviewed in the United States on June 12, 2023
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I really enjoyed the storyline of this book. While they were several issues with using tape worms to do what they did and have them take over people‘s bodies, a tapeworm species was probably the best choice for a benevolent parasite that helped people for this book.

The author does raise important questions. In my mind, the most important question is whether or not this type of research should be done. Should someone take an implant like a tapeworm if it would make their lives easier? This type of question is important as we see the broader use of things like stem cells in medical practice.
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Bea
5.0 out of 5 stars Conspiracies, drama, science, and miracles, oh my!
Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2014
Verified Purchase
I have been waiting for this book for months, ever since Grant announced it. I didn't even care what it was about. Actually the title, and the blurb, are a bit off-putting; who the heck wants to read a fiction book about parasites, parasites we willingly ingest? Ick! But I have faith in Grant's writing and she didn't let me down. That said, I don't see myself knowingly swallowing a parasite anytime soon.

Whereas with "Feed" it took me a hundred pages or so before I was engaged, "Parasite" sucked me in right away. While the sleeping sickness and the truth about the parasites were interesting, it was the story of Sally Mitchell that really kept me interested. The Sally Mitchell we meet in the book is Sally 2.0. The first Sally died in a car accident six years ago but comes back to life thanks to the parasite in her body. This Sally has no memory of her life the first time around and even had to relearn basics such as language. She's utterly fascinating as she deals with daily life, holding down a part-time job, constant medical testing, a boy friend, and the family she has no memory of, who have difficulty accepting Sally 2.0 especially as she underwent a personality change.

That could make a book all on its own but there's the mysterious sleeping sickness infecting people and its possible connection to the parasites. There's a large pharmaceutical company which may or may not be evil, a love story, secrets, treachery (I was so sad, I liked that character!), and an eccentric character or two (I'm looking at you Tansy!). It's a lot to tackle and not all of the plot lines are resolved in this book. There are more books to come so we should see them resolved. I foresaw a couple twists but for the most part the book kept me guessing and kept me enthralled. With the exception of Nathan who seemed too understanding to be real, the characters are complex and multi-dimensional; the issues and themes brought up are scary and all too real; and Grant spins a fascinating tale. You want this book, you really do.
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LA in Dallas
1.0 out of 5 stars Mira Grant is no Seanan McGuire, apparently
Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2022
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I am a huge Seanan McGuire fan. I have read all of the Incryptid series, October Daye, and Wayward Children, as well as Middlegame While I waiting for Seasonal Fears, I figured it was time to tackle the books she has written under her Mira Grant pseudonym. And so I read Parasite.

Wow! What a disappointment! This is a bad book. The plot is obvious and predictable, the characters are either boring or stupid and evil, and as for this claim by a reviewer:

"Fans of [the Newsflesh] series will definitely want to check this new book out. But fans of Michael Crichton-style technothrillers will be equally enthralled: as wild as Grant’s premise is, the novel is firmly anchored in real-world science and technology."
—Booklist

No, it is NOT. It is end-to-end science howlers.

Let me admit that for me Parasite was always going to be a hard sell. I am a retired scientist. I had a 31-year career of research on the molecular genetics of worm behavior, in which, among other things, we carried out genetic engineering of worms, including the introduction of genes from other species. Thus, I am as close as you can find to an expert in the science on which Parasite purports to be based. I will not list everything that McGuire gets wrong -- that is a job without end.

The bigger question is why it bothers me so much. I read a lot of Fantasy and Science Fiction. Most science fiction is full of science nonsense: the authors just make up whatever technologies they need to move their plots and cover up with technobabble. Fantasy, of course, makes no pretense of scientific plausibility. I have developed powerful suspension-of-disbelief muscles. How does Parasite defeat me? I think it is a combination of two things. First, because this is an area I know about, it's personal. It's very hard to suspend disbelief when you're screaming "Idiotic!" at your kindle every second page. The second and more important reason, I think, is that Parasite is scientifically pretentious. It is very obvious, as the review excerpt quoted above implies, that Parasite believes itself to be "firmly anchored in real-world science and technology".

Even fantasy requires some sort of internally consistent logical underpinnings. McGuire knows this, and does it very well in Incryptid and October Daye.

All this would be forgivable if Parasite were otherwise a good novel. But it isn't. It was obvious even from the publisher's blurb that it was going to be a Frankenstein retelling. That's OK. Many books retell classic stories. But Parasite is terribly predictable. The first half of the book was slow. I kept looking at my kindle progress meter and wondering when the story was going to start. At 50% essentially nothing had happened. Then, finally, stuff started to happen, but nothing surprising. Already at 50% I had figured out the twist ending. Also, the plot depends on heaps of implausible coincidence.

And the characters -- Ugh. The book is told by Sally (Sal) Mitchell. One of the minor characters in the book goes on at some length about how boring Sal is, and I agree 100%. The other main character is Sal's boyfriend Nathan Kim, who is equally boring. Most of the other characters are scientists, and they are awful. I'm pretty sure McGuire has heard the phrase "scientific ethics", but she clearly doesn't believe that any such thing exists as a real consideration in the lives of real scientists. The scientists in Parasite are uniformly stupid and evil, and inhumane. McGuire has had this problem with scientists in some of her other books. For instance, in Come Tumbling Down we have the following bit of dialog:

“Do they not say ‘please’ in mad science land?” asked Christopher, even as he did what she’d asked.

“Not as a rule.” Jack shook her head, pulling the first strap across Dr. Bleak’s massive chest. “When a scientist speaks, it behooves the ordinary soul to listen. We rarely speak without cause.”

This is obnoxious horse-puckey. Scientists ARE ordinary souls, and they often speak without cause.

Now, let me be clear. Some scientists ARE stupid and evil. Scientists are human and they suffer from all the faults that humans do. But McGuire seems to believe that stupid and evil are essential to being a scientist. She fails to write any character that comes across as a real believable scientist to me.

So, what next? Ordinarily I would not continue to read a series of books that began so badly. Moreover, the publisher's blurbs of Symbiont and Chimera make them sound like formulaic zombie novels. But because it is Seanan McGuire, I may give her a chance.
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winterlongone
4.0 out of 5 stars Parasite Zombies - thank you!!!!
Reviewed in the United States on November 11, 2013
Verified Purchase
I've already re-read the newsflesh trilogy at least twice now, wishing it was the first time all over again, and Mira Grant does the next best thing - starts a new apocalyptic series. This one we see unfold from the beginning in real time, while the frontpieces for the chapters give us the design and rollout flashbacks of the three people at the pharmaceutical company responsible for the impending doom, and hints on what is coming through quotes from a fictitious (?) children's book. I loved how Ms. Grant slipped additional info into her books this way in the newsflesh series, and I'm glad to see her keep up with the tradition.

I really want to give this five stars. Two things in the book are forcing me to drop it to four. Still an excellent review - but she could have done *so* much more with these two mods. I wish she had.

Mod one: This time, viewpoints stay strictly on one character, whom I suspect in a fashion is either patient zero, the potential cure, or possibly both - Sally (now Sal), whose life was saved from a deadly car accident (and "rebooted", inadvertently; she loses all her memories, including speaking and reading English) through a new pharmaceutical cure-all; a genetically engineered/modified tapeworm that lives in the person's gastro tract and does not allow other organisms to live with it's host body. The base idea behind this, a combination of the issues of upswings of immune disorders and dysfunction due to overcleanliness in first world countries and the fact that overuse of antibiotic/antifungal/antiparasitic meds has caused incurable strains of bacteria, viruses and parasites, is a known and reasonable premise. For some reason, Ms. Grant chooses to focus only on the first part of the dual-pronged problem. This would occasionally jar me out of the book, which no author wants to do; I'll re-read the book and correct this and raise my four stars if I have missed or not understood some of what she has written.

Mod two: It became painfully obvious to me very quickly that the warm dark with the drums in her dreams, when she couldn't remember anything else post-accident, was the parasite. No surprise; no shock; no suspense build up when the worm zombies were able to say her name but nothing else. That was so obvious, it was painful. Even more unbelievable - if that's possible - is that her boyfriend, an infectious disease MD who specializes in parasites, never suspected. So unless he betrays/admits this to her soon, that subplot is in danger of being called out by me into mod three. However, Ms. Grant is very good at drawing you in and having someone "loyal" betray someone at a critical point. I suspect we will see a twist with that character soon. If not...

Other than those items, this is a fantastic new start to a series. I look forward to the next book!
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4.0 out of 5 stars " my darling child be careful now and don't go out alone."
Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2013
Verified Purchase
"My darling child be careful now and don"t go out alone." Throughout this story, a child's book is quoted by three of the characters. The amassed quotes are so beguiling that I looked up the title on the off chance the book is real. (It isn't.) This attention to detail is one of the things that makes this novel so engaging. Given the topic, that is not an easy task. The plot of the book concerns a future 2027 in which a huge pharmaceutical company has conquered many diseases by treating humans with a tapeworm that dispenses medicine and generally takes care of the carrier's health. The main character, Sally, had an "implant" when she turned her car into oncoming traffic. After that accident left her essentially dead, Symbogen takes over her care with special worms and resurrects a person now into her sixth year. But she remembers nothing at all from before the accident.

Sally's personality is appealing; kind with a bit of spunk. Her world keeps the reader glued to the page. It is true that it has not been so long since diet pills ordered through the mail did in fact contain tapeworms, I have seen people do dumber things to lose weight. The ick factor is part of the hook. It is an intriguing premise that we humans have sanitized our worlds to the point our immune system is bored and doesn't work. Enter the tapeworm to fix all that. Of course this would not be a book if everything worked out well. The human carriers seem to be prone to an outbreak of sleeping illness in which they start attacking everyone else. At this point the whole thing is way too zombie like for me since I am zombied out.

I was sorry to see an old plot line com into this book which I chose due to its new premise. And I think the first solution to the first mystery pushes belief a couple of steps way too far. Nonethe less the book had me in its embrace. I got the proof copy from Netgalley, but will buy the second book. The writing is bright and sometimes witty. Picking on big pharma is always a lot of fun. The main characters are deeply intriguing. You wouldn't be reading it if the word parasites hadn't dinged a bell for you, so I recommend you read it.
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