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The Parasite

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The Parasite, a science fiction novella (40,000 words) by Neal Asher After mining complex ices deep in the Solar System, Jack Smith is concerned about his profit margin, but is it him who doesn’t want to face quarantine or something squirming inside him? The Cryon Corporation Director, Geoffry Haven, is also concerned about the bottom line and might consider Jack an expense he can no longer afford, though perhaps suitable for a starring role in a snuff movie. Meanwhile, the human and unhuman agents of World Health must investigate. Perhaps it’s time to deploy vat-grown killers and an anti-photon weapon, because the parasite is coming to Earth, and it’s hungry. The Parasite was first published by Tanjen Ltd as an illustrated novella back in 1996. Tanjen closed down a number of years later and since then the novella has been difficult if not impossible to obtain. There are copies out there, but checking recently I haven’t seen one for below $50.00, which is a hell of a lot for something only 130 pages long and perhaps only for completists. I’ve edited it again, thought I haven’t been too heavy-handed since I didn’t want to deliver something that had completely ceased to be the original. This is my first attempt at self-publishing through Amazon Kindle. I hope you all enjoy it! – Neal Asher “Once again, Neal Asher gives his reader a meal of such exquisite taste that you're left like Oliver, desiring more.” – Authortrek

134 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1996

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Neal L. Asher

36 books15 followers

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5 stars
419 (41%)
4 stars
375 (36%)
3 stars
188 (18%)
2 stars
30 (2%)
1 star
3 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews
Profile Image for Bryan Brown.
269 reviews9 followers
November 19, 2020
This is an enjoyable story about what it means to be both human and fully sentient. The argument is a compelling one that true sentience requires an organism to overcome it's innate biological or electronic drives and make decisions that are not driven by those fundamental motives.

The simple example is a human choosing to use birth control in order to have sex for fun. But the explanations become very messy when the individual is an AI, or a possibly symbiotic relationship with a parasite organism.

I liked the story enough to give it four stars but I'm taking one away for the following reason. I just can't tell if this is set in the polity universe or not. It would have been before the Quiet War, and there are enough technological references to golems, AIs, and ceramal materials to make that link. But the events in the novella would have had profound influences on humans that I don't see in the Polity novels, so maybe it's a Kelvin timeline alternate reality of the Polity? Not sure.

Anyways, worth reading, but if you are like me you will have some dissonance trying to fit it into a broader picture.
Profile Image for Paulo "paper books only".
1,471 reviews75 followers
August 6, 2024
The parasite is the first book that I've read from Neal Asher and concluded. I started something else and couldn't enjoy it. But since I've got a lot of his novels I try again. I enjoy the sci-fi novel but I don't think is something marvellous or top - it's after all one of the first things he wrote. This mean that I may enjoy other stuff.

This book we follow a person who has been collecting water from one of the Jupiter moon's. Something goes wrong but money is money. As he returns to earth he goes back to civilization with something within. The company that he works and remind one of those multi-billion all over the place (think umbrella corporation) leave him be. As he moves throughout the city people died. Some people from the CDC (or equivalent) tries to control the infection and capture him. That part was good rat and cat stuff.

The world is quite interesting, remind me of cyberpunk kind of book. Enjoy it but at times was a bit confusing.
Profile Image for Erik Martenson.
Author 7 books20 followers
January 26, 2023
Symbiotic Cyberpunk Thriller

I accidentally discovered this book when I thought I had read everything by Neal Asher, and I dived right into it. The Parasite is an early work, written sometime during the 90s. It’s rougher around the edges than his later works, but that didn’t make it any less good. On the contrary, it was totally unputdownable. We follow Jack, an ice comet miner for The Cryon Corporation, a dying profession as automated drones are taking over. On his last run he harvests more than just ice, and the game is on. The Parasite has all the right vibes: The Thing, Demolition Man, The Terminator, Leviathan, and so on. Good times! The only downside with this story is … that it’s too short!
Profile Image for Doug.
186 reviews21 followers
November 15, 2017
I was introduced to Asher through a recommendation from Iain M. Banks, by way of my Kindle. You know, "if you liked this author you'll like 'Author X'". That sort of thing. I've heard of the Polity Universe, but have not checked it out. After reading this self-published novella from Asher's distant past, I'm more inclined to do so. While The Parasite is messy and ends incredibly abruptly, I enjoyed the majority of the read. It's violent and action packed with some fun cyber punk ideas thrown in. Bonus point for being able to finish it during a short domestic flight! Will be picking up Prador Moon or Gridlinked in the near future.
13 reviews
March 16, 2022
Surprisingly Great Story!

I was skeptical of the short page length but couldn't pass up a Neal Asher story on KU.

Really fun read! Drama, humor, pathos and a foreshadowing of Neal's future worlds.

Very satisfying.
Profile Image for Adam.
228 reviews20 followers
December 29, 2024
Weak start, but does build up the to pace I expect of Asher.

The main issue really is that it desperately needs some more thorough editing. The version I read is the version that Asher self-published through Amazon after the publishers of the original illustrated version (Tanjen Ltd) closed down, and I think the fact it's self-published is very overt—which is to say, in many places it reads more like a fanfic than a professionally published book.

For example the word "superfluous" is used twice in the first five pages (ironically both times surrounded by actually superfluous modifiers that an editor would remove). The majority of the dialogue in the first half is clunky and cliché, with a half heated attempt to acknowledge it in a meta joke: '"what is the meaning of this?" Bannerman asked, realising he'd been speaking in clichés for the last half hour'. Besides the clunkiness, there's also lots of grammar mistakes, and a spelling mistake on the blurb.

Asher notes that when deciding to self-publish this (the first of quite a few novellas he's self-published now), he chose not to be "too heavy-handed since I didn't want to deliver something that had completely ceased to be the original". I think that this was the wrong move, which has in turn only confirmed the fact that this is, in Asher's words, "perhaps only for completists".

That's all to say: by the end it's decent, and the themes were good (approaching, but shying away from, class war in parts; mainly focusing on more classic SF questions of android sentience etc) and anyone who's read a lot of Asher would probably still like it. It is, however, weaker, less well paced, and more error-riddled than his other publications.
2 reviews
April 22, 2023
Terrific

A fun read! Neal Asher does an amazing job with this story. Blending future possibilities with the full range of human behaviors. The delight I find in his work is the delight in discovering how he makes me cheer for his protagonist while booing the bad guys. And wondering what plot twists will stretch my mind. Hooray for this one!
11 reviews2 followers
March 4, 2019
Yicky

Short but perfectly formed tale. An alien parasite, a human parasite and a cyborg battle their way to a fitting, and satisfactory, ending.

The Wonder Horse recommends this to anyone in need of a short escape with a thoughtful book.
Profile Image for Jarryd Kalideen.
385 reviews7 followers
May 19, 2019
Modern take on a classic tale. This is a riveting, fast-paced, well written story that is both plausible and fascinating. It has an open ending and personally by the end I wasn't sure who's side I was really on. 😉.
Profile Image for Dainis Mazkaļķis.
236 reviews3 followers
July 20, 2023
3.5/5

Oficiāli neskaitās daļa no ''Polity Universe'', bet mierīgi var uzskatīt par tās pirmo daļu vai pašu pirmo prīkvelu, jo redzami daudzu ideju aizmetņi. Nav tik labi nostrādāta un ''izdomāta'' kā vēlākie darbi, bet kā debijas darbs ir spēcīgs un interesants, par to apaļojums uz augšu
Profile Image for Liam John.
69 reviews
December 21, 2024
Great book if your really interested in hearing how hot every single character you meet is. Most of them are very hot and painfully aware of it. Interesting premise and it certainly moved rapidly but kinda disappointed with how one note it felt
31 reviews
May 30, 2018
Short but sweet

Some of the basics of the Spatterjay virus, nicely laid out. Good story, a couple typos, but worth the time and money for sure.
Profile Image for Kerry.
727 reviews1 follower
January 30, 2019
A 1996 novella by Asher. Obviously not as accomplished as his later works. A trial run on some more complicated later used concepts. Just ok.
11 reviews
March 29, 2019
GOOD READ!

Fast paced. Interesting. Thought provoking. Good plot. Visionary and exciting sci fi thriller.
First time I read this author and will now read all his work.
271 reviews2 followers
June 28, 2020
Fun

Well that was fun and, being by Neal Asher, well left of the field. Glad you resurrected this Neal, thank you.
Profile Image for JT Neville.
55 reviews1 follower
August 2, 2020
Fun quick read

Doesn’t really step outside similar stories but an enjoyable easy read. Save it for a trip or the beach and give it a chance.
1 review
January 16, 2022
Great read

Really fun read. Too short but throughly enjoyed every page. Well thought out plot. Hope there is a sequel. Highly recommend.
236 reviews
March 11, 2023
Enjoyable simplistic SF romp

While neither complex nor deep this is a very enjoyable story with a few, well used, SF tropes used very well.
10 reviews
November 6, 2023
great story

I like neal Asher’s writing but I think for 6.99 this was way over priced. Very short only spent2 hours reading.
1 review
April 28, 2024
short story

Great short story read in typical Asher style, easy to engage and enjoy - managed to get intrigue, action and a believable future in a few short pages.
Profile Image for Bill Ramsell.
476 reviews1 follower
August 23, 2017
A very good early novella. I read this one mostly during the eclipse of August 21, 2017.
7 reviews1 follower
January 30, 2015
I'm a big fan of Neal Asher, I've read several of his books and found them all very well written and very enjoyable. Science fiction based around strange organisms and bilogy in general.
Trying to locate this book was difficult until the advent of ebooks and able to get it online, hence why this book (one of his first) came later.
If you've never read his stuff before, I wouldn't recommned this as a first read by this author. The Skinner is a much more indepth book and a good introduction to his Universe.
This however is a short story and told reasonably well, but doesn't really go far enough. The premise is based on an alien orgnaism that infects an astronaut and gets taken back to Earth and the resulting mayhem. A good quick read which could have been taken further. If you have seen the movie "Species" then it gives you a general idea.
Profile Image for Miki.
499 reviews24 followers
June 23, 2011
A light and fast read, but the reality of it being an earlier work from a less developed author shows through. The lead character's self-awareness post-infestation is a bit hammy, and the resolution seems a little odd in the broader context of the universe that has developed since this was first published. Still fun, though.
Profile Image for Nick.
678 reviews33 followers
May 22, 2012
This one is fascinating because it was written about 16 years ago yet contains a number of Asher signature tropes: golems, artificial intelligence, alien mycelia invading human bodies, soulless corporations. It seems to me like the template for many of the more recent novels Asher has written
2 reviews
November 12, 2016
This was my first Experience of Neal Asher. This story captivated my imagination and introduced me to the Polity Universe. I read it in one sitting. If I sound like a fan, I am, and this story is responsible.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews

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