Society Magazine

BOOK REVIEW: I Breathed a Body by Zac Thompson

By Berniegourley @berniegourley

Amazon.in page
Out: October 5, 2021
This is one creepy commentary on technology run amok, and the alienation, desensitization, and disconnection that can result. [Or, at least that's how I interpret it.] The protagonist is a driven social media executive who finds herself in territory that even she believes is over the line, despite her near psychopathic emotional disconnection. Another way to interpret the story is that the fungi that has taken parasitic control over humanity is making people see the world more as they would - i.e. with less cringing about death, decomposition, and deformation. [I happen to think that the fungi infection is a clever plot device to get across ideas about technology and modernity, but I could be wrong.]

Either way, I do think this is a clever story. There's a species of Cordyceps fungi that takes control of the brain of an ant, steers it to the top of the nearest tree, and bursts out of the ant's head to spread its spores from its new, elevated vantage point. This book reminded me of the Cordyceps fungi, and I wouldn't be surprised if it inspired the story - with the requisite growth in sophistication to account for taking over a much more complex brain. This is a compelling and thought-provoking story, but it's also gruesome and at times chaotic. If you can take horror, you'll probably find it worth reading.

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