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Symbiont
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Symbiont
Unavailable
Symbiont
Audiobook16 hours

Symbiont

Written by Mira Grant

Narrated by Christine Lakin

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

THE SECOND BOOK IN MIRA GRANT'S TERRIFYING PARASITOLOGY SERIES.

THE ENEMY IS INSIDE US.
The SymboGen designed tapeworms were created to relieve humanity of disease and sickness. But the implants in the majority of the world's population began attacking their hosts, turning them into a ravenous horde.
Now those who do not appear to be afflicted are being gathered for quarantine as panic spreads, but Sal and her companions must discover how the tapeworms are taking over their hosts, what their eventual goal is, and how they can be stopped.

Parasitology Parasite Symbiont Chimera
For more from Mira Grant, check out:
Newsflesh Feed Deadline Blackout
Newsflesh Short Fiction Apocalypse Scenario #683: The Box Countdown San Diego 2014: The Last Stand of the California Browncoats How Green This Land, How Blue This Sea The Day the Dead Came to Show and Tell Please Do Not Taunt the Octopus
LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 25, 2014
ISBN9781478983040
Unavailable
Symbiont
Author

Mira Grant

Mira Grant is the author of the New York Times best-selling Newsflesh trilogy, along with multiple other works of biomedical science fiction. She has been nominated for the Hugo Award, and her book, Feed, was chosen as one of NPR's 100 Killer Thrillers.

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Reviews for Symbiont

Rating: 3.673913188405797 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

138 ratings12 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The second book in the Parasitology series likely suffers from second book syndrome. It is not as good as the first and feels more flat. There are great moments but overall it doesn't move. With a horror or thriller plot line, there is no sense of urgency or doom. I really like the idea of the book, with the unique look at zombies and the character's POV, but it doesn't really explore it that much.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love this author, so it was a pretty sure bet that I'd love this book. (You know you have a reader hooked when they pre-order your hardcover about tapeworms. Now that's devotion.)I continued to enjoy Sal's story. There are a lot of neat discussions in Symbiont about defining a person (i.e., is it the body that makes a human a person?) and gender identity. I did notice that Sal gets kidnapped a lot. Seriously. Like she's featured in an 8-bit Nintendo game. (And now I'm picturing Nathan as Mario and Sal as Princess Peach.) She does gain more agency in this book, and I'm interested to see how that continues in the next one.The last 100 pages kicked this book from 4-star to 5-star for me. The action really picked up, and to avoid spoilers let me just say that my adoration is due to Fishy and Beverly.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Exciting sequel to Parasite. Can't wait for the next book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Continuation of the series, and lacking a bit in the wow factor that makes some of Mira's work so good. This is very much a novel setting up the stage for the final showdown (presumably in the next book) that determines whether or not humanity survives as independents or only as tapeworm breading grounds. Sal remarkably quickly comes to terms with the shock surprise from the end of the last book that she's not Sally with a new personality caused by her suffering an epileptic fit whilst driving, she is instead a human/tapeworm symbiont- her advanced tapeworm that has spent her previous life protecting her from auto-immune diseases, took the opportunity to transfer to her brain stem and integrated into a seamless new personality, Sal. The plague of zombies currently battling the US are those unfortunate souls who didn't have an unconscious fit at the right time, and have suffered a less than perfect integration, the tapeworm damaging key areas of the brain leaving little more than hunger as a motivational force.This is very very thin as a biological explanation for zombies, and sadly seems to get much of the current state knowledge about integrated neurology wrong. But it makes an interesting premise for the rest of the book. Sal calls the zombies 'cousins' throughout, and the few integrated symbionts are her brothers and sisters. The few traces of possible epigenetic personality that remain are an intriguing enigma that may be explained in the next book. Meanwhile there's lots of action even if it doesn't drive the plot very far. Sal has to escape from Sherman's clutches after a hospital admission went wrong, and Tasny has the same issues with Dr. Banks. Adam remains a bit confused about what's going on and just wants his family to live peacefully together. It all flows the characters remain human even if they aren't - which is a question still to be decided. But at the same time the lack of progress towards treating/surviving/surrendering is at times annoying and feels slow. There is more consideration than in Feed about the supply of essential services, but it all still seems a bit lucky and coincidental, chance that they have sufficient power etc. And having been part of a team that's installed lab equipment even into professionally designed spaces pre-prepared for it, I laughed at the thought of moving a bio-tech lab into a reconverted factory on an 'ad-hoc' basis. It just isn't going to work. Fun though, and I am curious to see who Mira will handle the issue of 'sides' in the conclusion.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    It's all so plausible, there are a lot of hunts for panaceas for all ills going on, and the idea of a tapeworm that could deal with the niggles is simple, however the "and then it grows and takes over your brain part"? Not so much of a fan. The first one was intense and I couldn't put it down, this one I read a few books over.I started it some time last year and just finished it and have no real hunger to read the end. I do want to no, no revulsion to finish but when I discovered none of the libraries have it yet I wasn't upset, it was ho-hum and on with my day.Sal is discovering what it means to be her, being kidnapped and being experimented on and she really, really just wants to live a peaceful life, but no-one is letting her, least of all her fellow parasites.Interesting but a bit meh.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I loooooove this series. It killed me to wait for the paperback because I was so enthralled by the first book. Is medical sci-fi a genre? Well, it should be, if it isn't. If you want to be grossed out in the best way, and think about the morality of a situation that seems plausible for the future of mankind, check out this series.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The second book has Sal constantly on the run while she is the one person everyone wants so they can figure her out and what makes her so special. Sal on the other hand is also finding out things that make her different from other hosts that have had their symbiont take over. This story does introduce more people like Sal to her and the reader. The only problem I had with it is that it is a middle book to a trilogy so there isn’t any clear wins and a definite cliffhanger ending.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Oh my goodness!
    While I had a small issue of Sal being so wimpy (I wanted her to embrace herself and be awesome tapeworm queen) I did enjoy this continuation of the story. I hate how crazy Sherman got and didn't like the Sally turn at the end but I'm sure things will be interesting in the next book
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I didn't enjoy this book as much as I enjoyed the first. It felt a bit bogged down and bloated, as if neither the writing nor the plot was moving at times. Second book of a trilogy syndrome, maybe. Still, by the end it had put the players in place for the war, and that's what needed to be done.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Volume two of Grant’s new trilogy turns into zombie territory as the “sleepwalkers” whose brains have been compromised by their genetically engineered, medicalized tapeworm implants run riot in the US (the condition of the rest of the world is not a concern of this book). Sal, the girl who figured out she was a chimera—a worm in a human body—at the end of the last book, long after the rest of us did, goes through many varieties of captivity as the government and the evil corporation behind the tapeworms and the rebel researcher trying to figure out what the evil corporation did all compete to control her. The annoying repetitions of phrases from a made-up children’s book that were characteristic of the first book continue here for the first half, and then finally, blessedly, get lost in more and more plot. Sal starts to exercise more control over her own life and gets a bit back against the sociopath in charge of the evil corporation, but the narrative ends on a cliffhanger ensuring that you’ll read the final book if you had any interest at all in this one.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is the second book in the Parasitology series by Grant; this was originally going to be a duology and was extended into a trilogy. The third book, Chimera, is set to release late 2015. This was hands down my least favorite book Mira Grant or Seanan McGuire (her other pen name) has written. I am a huge fan of all of Mira Grant's/Seanan McGuire's other books. For some reason though this series is just missing the mark for me.Sal is coming to terms with the fact that she is no longer human. Her human host Sally died in the car accident she was recovering from in the first book (Parasite) and the tapeworm Sal has taken over. While Sal is reeling from this news, the world outside is falling apart. Sleepwalkers, including more aggressive variants, are taking over humanity completely. Sal and her boyfriend Nathan (who is a parasitologist) are working with Nathan’s mom, Shanti, to try and figure out how to stop this crisis and save humanity. Shanti is one of the scientists who helped to develop that tapeworm implants to cure disease in humanity.I will start out by saying that the first book in this series, Parasite, was my least favorite book by Mira Grant/Seanan McGuire (although I still thought the story for that one was decent). This book was worse than Parasite. It is long and it feels long. It is also very wordy and the same ideas/concerns are rehashed over and over again. It is still readable and decently written. There were just too many plot inconsistencies and the books is way, way too wordy. It's like the story doesn't know whether to be an action-packed zombie novel or a philosophical discussion on the ills of science/medicine gone awry. It teeters in the middle and ends up being pretty bad at both. There is also this strange power struggle going on between the three scientists that helped develop SymboGen’s tapeworm. It’s like all three scientists want to play God and so they like to jerk each other around a lot while humanity dies around them. Honestly it comes off as an obnoxious medical drama of sorts.I found myself skimming portions of the story and then going back to reread them to make sure I hadn't missed anything (I hadn't). Vast portions of this book could have been left out and the story would have been better for it. I am not sure what happened here, but this is a bloated book. It is a book I did not enjoy written by an author I thought could do no wrong. I am very disappointed. It is still readable and there are sections and ideas within this book that are interesting. But, wow, this book needed some cuts and some editing before publishing.Okay enough complaining...well okay there might be some more complaining. I have had trouble with the whole concept of this series right from the beginning. The idea that vast portions of humanity would allow themselves to be infected with a tapeworm to prevent disease is just..well...really unlikely. People are incredibly stubborn and incredibly protective of their bodies. It’s taken a lot for me to set all that aside and accept that “yes, of course everyone would get tapeworms implanted”. The confusion comes in with the Sleepwalkers and the more aggressive tapeworms. There seems to be kind of two types of people infected, or maybe they are going through stages? It’s just all very confusing. People without tapeworm implants are not supposed to be infected, because it’s not an infection it’s a parasite. So I am still a bit confused about how cities are collapsing if only people with tapeworms are getting taken over. What is everyone who doesn’t have a tapeworm doing? Also why do they need the dogs to sniff out sleepwalkers? Aren’t they noisily moaning all the time? Or do only the active ones moan and the other ones need to be sniffed out? So confused...All that confusion aside... let’s talk about our two main characters Sal and Nathan. Sal (Sally) has been a very confusing character. She is constantly passing out (we are given a reason for that finally in this book), she seems both too naive and too ruthless at times. In the last book she was supposedly still human but at the end of that book we find out she’s not. Now she’s getting used to be a tapeworm living in human skin. Okay I kind of get all that. Then in the second half of this book they are all like “Oh, but maybe you ARE still human too!” Okay make up your mind and get on with the story...I am totally losing interest here…I do enjoy some of the ideas behind the story. I also enjoy the research that must have been done to write this book, there is interesting information on parasitology and genetics in here. Additionally I enjoy the relationship that Nathan and Sal have; it is one based on mutual respect and trust. Overall parts of this book were okay but I did not enjoy the majority of it. The book is too wordy, too slow, and too long. There is too much back and forth in the plot and too much rehashing of the same ideas over and over. The characters are inconsistent and the side plots about scientist power struggles are too dramatic and preachy. I haven’t enjoyed our main character and am having a really hard time with the main premise of the whole series (that vast portions of humanity would allow parasite to be implanted into their bodies). I would recommend reading Grant’s Newsflesh series but would recommend skipping this one. I won’t be reading the final book in this series because I just do not care.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Yep. I gave a Mira Grant book 2 stars. It pains me to do so, it really does, but this series in general has not impressed me at all. Parasite/Symbiont was intended originally to be a duology but it has now transformed into a trilogy with Symbiont becoming nothing more than a seriously massive tome of filler. It was a huge undertaking to get through this (a total of 23 days which is fairly unheard of for me) but there’s no denying that it definitely lacked direction.By now we’ve had our fair share of romances between humans and well, non-humans. All members of the supernatural (vampires, werewolves, fairies and even zombies) and while I’m all for diversity in romances, I’m not sure human and tapeworm was ever on my wishlist. When news of this series first came to light, I was definitely intrigued. A tapeworm named The Intestinal Bodyguard is the answer to anything from allergies to colds, yet it does much more than anticipated when the tapeworms learn how to overtake their human bodies and claim them as their own. The transformation process went differently for some. Sal, a chimera, developed a personality and even formed a romance with Nathan, the son of Dr. Shanti Cale the co-creator of the original tapeworm. Others weren’t so fortunate and now infect the streets of San Francisco in search of sustenance (basically a zombie, but they’re called sleepwalkers). The inclusion of the romance angle was a bit far-fetched and I felt that there was enough interesting aspects of this story going on that it didn’t need to be included. Plus, it’s kind of gross, but who am I to judge I guess.One of the main issues I had with Parasite were some various plot holes that could have swallowed a building. Most specifically was Sal’s fear of cars that supposedly developed after her car accident, however, she was still human at the time of the accident. Her tapeworm didn’t take over her brain until following the accident. It never quite made sense that she took on her same phobia yet none of her memories or anything else. There was a clumsy attempt to backtrack and explain this, basically the phobia was ingrained into her during counseling sessions when she was still at SymboGen, and while this would explain it it was far from a sufficient justification because huh? Why would the scientists trouble themselves with making sure Sal remained scared of cars? Baffling.The conclusion of Parasite left off with Sal just barely escaping SymboGen, but unfortunately her ‘tapeworm sister’ Tansy was captured in the process. A chunk of the novel is spent on finding her location and concocting a dangerous rescue mission just to get her back. The rest of the novel involves other dangerous acts that constantly put the characters in unnecessary danger in a failed attempt to generate an enticing intensity. First there was the foray back to the horde infected streets of San Francisco because, whoops, we left the dogs at home! Then there’s the medical condition of Sal’s that naturally can’t be treated in the lab so another trip into the city is required. Then Sal gets kidnapped a few times by various individuals. There’s a lot happening within these 500+ pages but it’s all inconsequential stuff that doesn’t need to be happening, if that makes sense. It was all entirely too tedious for my liking. I’ll likely pick up the final installment Chimera since I’m already so invested, but my expectations are near rock bottom at this point.