Monday, March 14, 2011

Strain by Guillermo del Toro & Chuck Hogan

First in the Strain series

When a plane arriving from Berlin goes completely black on the runway at JFK, losing all electrical power and contact with the outside world, authorities expect to find a tense hostage situation on board. Instead, they discover that almost everyone on the plane has mysteriously died, presumably during the very brief interval between the time it landed and the moment a SWAT team stormed the cabin. Suspecting a disease of some kind and fearing its spread, authorities call in Dr. Ephraim Goodweather, head of a CDC team set up to deal with just this sort of fast-moving, potentially catastrophic epidemic.

What Dr. Goodweather and his team gradually discover, however, is something much stranger and potentially even more dangerous: a species of parasitic worm that gradually turns its host into a bloodthirsty something that very closely resembles a vampire. Soon they are operating well outside the realm of established science, especially after they team up with Abraham Setrakian, a Holocaust survivor and former academic who now operates a pawnshop in Spanish Harlem and has dealt with this sort of thing before. Armed with Setrakian's knowledge and an extensive arsenal of anti-vampire weaponry, the CDC team sets out to control the outbreak by attacking its source.

An interesting premise and I was intrigued by the storyline as I've enjoyed many vampire novels in the past.  This one did not disappoint though I could tell towards the end that it was going to be a series as there was no way it could be finished in one.  So of course there is a cliff-hanger to make me want to read the next one.  But it was borderline too much for me.  The gore was pretty offensive especially in some sections.  I just turned down the volume and waited it out.