Ratings62
Average rating3.5
Across America a mysterious disease is turning ordinary people into raving, paranoid murderers who inflict brutal horrors on strangers, themselves, and even their own families.
Working under the government’s shroud of secrecy, CIA operative Dew Phillips crisscrosses the country trying in vain to capture a live victim. With only decomposing corpses for clues, CDC epidemiologist Margaret Montoya races to analyze the science behind this deadly contagion. She discovers that these killers all have one thing in common – they’ve been contaminated by a bioengineered parasite, shaped by a complexity far beyond the limits of known science.
Meanwhile Perry Dawsey – a hulking former football star now resigned to life as a cubicle-bound desk jockey – awakens one morning to find several mysterious welts growing on his body. Soon Perry finds himself acting and thinking strangely, hearing voices . . . he is infected.
The fate of the human race may well depend on the bloody war Perry must wage with his own body, because the parasites want something from him, something that goes beyond mere murder.
Featured Series
3 primary booksInfected is a 3-book series with 3 released primary works first released in 2008 with contributions by Scott Sigler.
Reviews with the most likes.
Never has a book made me squeamish before reading Infected. Thank you Scott Sigler for one of the best books I've read in a long time.
I just can't finish this book. The story seems interesting enough, but the author drags it along with too much medical/science talk. That alone is enough reason for me to place this book on my “abandoned” shelf. Perhaps I'll come back to it later, but right now I have too many other good books waiting to be read.
Infected is the story of Perry Dawsy, a former college football star who's left working in tech support after a knee injury leaves him unable to play. Perry's the kind of guy who's got a lot of anger stored up inside him, and when he gets infected with a new disease that threatens to drive him insane and take control of his body, that anger threatens to come out. At the same time, a group of scientists and special agents are trying to find out the links between several mass killings throughout the US, in which the killers keep babbling about triangles before they themselves die.
I really liked this story - Sigler has a great ability to tell an engaging story, and manages to do a good job of tying the personal story of Dawsy in with the larger reality that the scientists are dealing with. He also manages to tell a story that is gory, and full of horrific scenes, but in a way that provides added emphasis for what's happening to the characters, rather than just being horrific for the sake of being horrific.
Now, having said that, there are a couple of caveats I should add:
1) This is not a story for everyone. There are a lot of very violent scenes in it, and a few points that just freaked me out, so if you don't like that kind of thing, you might want to skip it.
2) If you listen to the ‘podiobook' version, be aware that there's a promo at the start of the very first episode that spoils the whole damn story. I can understand Sigler and the publishers wanting to promote his newest work, but it really annoyed me.
3) Also relevant to just the audio version: Sigler's not the best at doing accents. His ‘normal' voice is great for audio, but not so much when he has to do hispanic voices.
www.scottsigler.com
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