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The Maggot People

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"Henning Koch is a writer who gets your attention and keeps it. His stories are written in language so beautiful that the reader finds himself reading aloud to hear it."—Irene Zion The Maggot People are just that—people that have had maggots take over their bodies, working in unison to allow the bodies to continue to function and appear human. Reminiscent of Frank Herbert's Hellstrom's Hive , Henning Koch looks at religion as much as he does politics and the state of living in today's world.

220 pages, Paperback

First published September 11, 2012

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About the author

Henning Koch

25 books433 followers
Henning Koch is a translator from Swedish, and a fiction writer. His first book was a short story collection, "Love Doesn't Work", 2011, and he followed this up with a novel "The Maggot People", 2014, both published by Dzanc Books.

Koch's translations include works by Hannes Råstam, Artur Lundkvist, Fredrik Backman, Birgitta Stenberg, Martin Shibbye, Tom Malmquist, and Anders Rydell.

One of his Fredrik Backman translations was a 2015 nomination for the Goodreads Choice Awards Best Fiction.



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5 stars
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5 (19%)
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6 (23%)
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Chelsea.
163 reviews8 followers
July 28, 2014
I was interested in the premise of the book--a man turning into a "maggot person" just can't help but peak my interest--and the beginning was fairly interesting. We meet the main character, interact a bit with him, and then of course, things get a bit weird and disgusting when he sleeps with the female maggot person who infects him, making him one of them. I still could have been fine with that, though, as nasty as that sounds.

What took the book down a notch for me was the fact that he has to wiggle his way through obstacles such as the threatening Mama Maggot, priests with guns, and eventually, how to literally wiggle his way out of somewhere.

That may all sound fine and good, quite exciting, yes? To an extent. Most of it is just ludicrous and you must have an enormous amount of suspension of disbelief for this book to even begin to make it through. If you make it to the ending, you will still probably hold up your hands in discontent; is this what the book has been about the entire time because there really is nothing else to show for it, and uhh...this was the weirdest twist I've ever laid eyes on in a book. I'm still mad when I think about it.

So, was the book creepy? It definitely had a creep factor. Maggots inside of the characters cannot be taken lightly. Would I recommend reading it? Maybe just the first 50-100 pages...
Profile Image for Carly Willis.
142 reviews2 followers
May 18, 2025
How do you rate a book that felt like a fever dream
Profile Image for Bill Hsu.
1,040 reviews229 followers
February 10, 2015
This was highly entertaining, but I thought the few great ideas didn't quite carry it over the length of a novel. The short stories in Love Doesn't Work were much tighter and more impressive, in my opinion.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews