As a science fiction/Fantasy/horror author Darcy Coates, with an extensive bibliography has been on my radar for a while especially given she lives in the Central Coast of Australia with "her family, cat, and a collection of chickens. Her home is surrounded by rolling wilderness on all sides". I selected Parasite out of her back catalogue as it ticks a lot of my preferred boxes, Science Ficiton, Interstellar Space, Aliens and Pandemic models…
As I was reading it its style reminded me of World War Z with its shifting view points in a series of discrete encounters in a larger narrative. This made sense when I realised this novel is actually five short stories/novellas tied together by an alien invasion throughout a distant human-populated system united under an entity called Control.
A fast, well-crafted straight forward tale of the monstrous alien infiltrator infection and the humans who after setbacks learn to rally and begin to defeat the threat. Nothing wrong with that. My sole caveat is that ends with a "the war had only just begun…". So whilst I don't think there is any likelyhood of a continuation of the story so it can leave a reader a bit unsatisfied.
As a science fiction/Fantasy/horror author Darcy Coates, with an extensive bibliography has been on my radar for a while especially given she lives in the Central Coast of Australia with "her family, cat, and a collection of chickens. Her home is surrounded by rolling wilderness on all sides". I selected Parasite out of her back catalogue as it ticks a lot of my preferred boxes, Science Ficiton, Interstellar Space, Aliens and Pandemic models…
As I was reading it its style reminded me of World War Z with its shifting view points in a series of discrete encounters in a larger narrative. This made sense when I realised this novel is actually five short stories/novellas tied together by an alien invasion throughout a distant human-populated system united under an entity called Control.
A fast, well-crafted straight forward tale of the monstrous alien infiltrator infection and the humans who after setbacks learn to rally and begin to defeat the threat. Nothing wrong with that. My sole caveat is that ends with a "the war had only just begun…". So whilst I don't think there is any likelyhood of a continuation of the story so it can leave a reader a bit unsatisfied.