‘Parasite Eve’ is to Kidney Transplants as ‘Moby Dick’ is to whaling.
This book was my first foray into Japanese written horror, and overall it was an interesting one. You can definitely see the differences between Western and Eastern horror within this book as the action moves along and slowly builds. The author knows his stuff, being a member of the scientific field he decided to write about, so the details within this book are above and beyond anything you would see in a standard horror novel in the West. (the book even includes an extensive bibliography to boot!)
The sheer amount of details contained in this book are both its blessing, and its curse. They are a blessing because it helps to build the believability and move the storyline along. Most of the horror itself in the intro to the book come from graphic descriptions of kidney transplants. This actually had me setting the book down a couple times as I started to get queasy from just how in depth the level of imagery went. But much like ‘Moby Dick’ however, it is easy to get bogged down in the sheer amount that the reader is presented. You learn every little detail you can about the subject, and much like listening to an expert in their field talk about their passion, one quickly finds themselves bored.
‘Parasite Eve’ was a very long winded book for what you got out of it. The horror takes a long while to build up, and some of the shock/scare moments are wonderfully done. But these great moments are reduced by some of the other moments in the book that simply come across as over the top, or too reminiscent of the anime culture and movies such as ‘Akira’. But then again, that’s part of the cultural nature and much like our Western devices make their way into our horror, so too does the same happen to the Japanese.
The last thing that bothered me was the end of the book. I actually found a spot where I believed the book could have ended and the story would have been fine. But instead, the story continued onwards for pages as it described various things that happened after the climax. This seemed to drag the book on longer than it should have. Though somewhat interesting, especially in having to explain in detail what actually happened during the climax, it also just too long to get through.
In the end, ‘Parasite Eve’ was an interesting read, and one that I did enjoy. It showed me a few differences in horror between Eastern and Western cultures, and I found those differences to be fascinating to read. The book itself was fairly well paced, and despite all the details, was a fairly good and enjoyable read. If you are looking for a lot of action, this may not be the book for you. However, if Japanese horror has ever appealed to you, and you are willing to read through some pretty descriptive scenes of transplant surgery, this might be the book for you. Lastly, if you are a horror writer, then I would suggest this if only to observe how another culture handles the topic of horror.
This book made the author an instant star, and I can see the how and why of it. Some of the concepts he presents are truly horrific, and anyone whose fears fall along the theme of loss of control due to something within our bodies will find this book truly terrifying.