I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong: Book Overview

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What is I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong about? Aside from common microorganisms, how do the trillions of other microbes affect us and the environment?

I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong is about the mysterious and fascinating world of microbes. In the book, Yong claims that although we often think of ourselves as individuals, we’re essentially walking ecosystems containing countless species of microbes living in symbiotic partnership with us.

Read on for a brief overview of I Contain Multitudes: The Microbes Within Us by Ed Yong.

I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong

When most people think of microbes, the first things that come to mind are disease-causing germs or healthy probiotic yogurts. We go about our lives largely unaware of the trillions of microbes on every surface and throughout our bodies, influencing everything from coral reefs to the physical and mental health of humans. I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong explores the mysterious and fascinating world of microbes: microscopic organisms with the ability to make sea creatures glow, eradicate diseases, and nudge ecosystems into disarray. 

Yong argues that not only are microbes ubiquitous, but they’re also integral to animal bodies (including humans). And by understanding the ways that we’re interdependent with microbes, we can then explore opportunities to use microbes to improve our health.

Yong is a British-American science journalist reporting for The Atlantic. He won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the Covid-19 pandemic and authored two New York Times best sellers, I Contain Multitudes and An Immense World. In I Contain Multitudes, he uses his ability to explain complex science through storytelling to give readers a new perspective on life and our connections to other organisms. He explains that although we often think of ourselves as individuals, we’re essentially walking ecosystems containing countless species of microbes living in symbiotic partnership with us. Fittingly, the book title quotes the Walt Whitman poem “Song of Myself,” which conveys a sense of oneness with the living world. 

What Is a Microbe?

“Microbe” is a catch-all term for microorganisms, living things that are too small to see with the naked eye. Yong explains that microbes exist in many forms, broadly categorized as bacteria, fungi, and viruses. (Shortform note: Protozoa is another scientific category of microbes that Yong doesn’t discuss in detail. Protozoa are single-celled organisms that are sometimes parasitic and cause diseases such as malaria.) 

Within these categories, other terms are often used to indicate a microbe’s function. For example, pathogens are disease-causing microbes, probiotics are microbes that produce a health benefit, and bacteriophages (also known as phages) are viruses that eat bacteria. 

Although pathogens are generally considered “bad” microbes, Yong asserts that microbes aren’t inherently bad or good. In his analogy of individual people as ecosystems of interacting microbes, Yong compares pathogens to invasive species—plants or animals that have a negative impact when they’re introduced into a new environment without any natural predators to control their population. Likewise, instead of painting microbes in broad strokes, he argues that it’s important to consider the context in which microbes cause harm to humans. 

History and Functions of Microbes

For billions of years, microbes were the only living organisms on the planet. I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong puts this in perspective, condensing the earth’s history into one calendar year. On this time scale, microbes entered the scene in March, plants and sea creatures appeared in November, and humans have only been around for the last 30 minutes at most. 

(Shortform note: David Attenborough first introduced this concept of the “cosmic calendar” in his television series Life on Earth to help people conceptualize the evolutionary history of the universe. Since then, it’s become a common tool for expressing the relatively small period of time that humans have been around. Although Ed Yong’s I Contain Multitudes implies that the cosmic calendar begins when Earth formed about 4.5 billion years ago, the calendar actually condenses the 14 billion years of the universe’s history into one year. On this time scale, each month is just over 1 billion years, and a human lifespan of 75 years is only 0.16 seconds.)

Yong emphasizes that not only have microbes been around much longer than any other life form on Earth, microbes actually created the conditions for other living organisms to evolve. Bacteria are responsible for breaking down organic matter and converting nutrients such as carbon and nitrogen into forms that plants and animals can use. Bacteria were also the first organisms to photosynthesize, the process by which plants harness energy from the sun and produce oxygen as a byproduct. Photosynthesis by early bacteria created the oxygenated atmosphere that enabled the animal kingdom to come into existence.

Microbes Shape Animals and Their Protection From Predators

In I Contain Multitudes, Ed Yong explains that microbes are an integral part of animal defense systems because they can alter an animal’s body and activate specific genes to make it less vulnerable to predation. (Shortform note: Microbes not only defend animals but also attract other organisms. For example, the unique scent produced by microbes in an elephant’s urine signals to other elephants its sex and mating readiness.) 

In one of Yong’s examples, a single bacterium species is responsible for the unusual self-defense mechanism of the Hawaiian bobtail squid. The bobtail squid has a pair of organs on its underside that glow at night, matching the luminescence of the moon. This eliminates the squid’s shadow, helping it hide from predators. However, these bioluminescent organs rely on the bacterium V. fischeri to mature fully. 

I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong: Book Overview

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Here's what you'll find in our full I Contain Multitudes summary:

  • A deep dive into the mysterious and fascinating world of microbes
  • How commercial probiotics have oversold health benefits
  • How modern sanitation practices are harming us

Emily Kitazawa

Emily found her love of reading and writing at a young age, learning to enjoy these activities thanks to being taught them by her mom—Goodnight Moon will forever be a favorite. As a young adult, Emily graduated with her English degree, specializing in Creative Writing and TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language), from the University of Central Florida. She later earned her master’s degree in Higher Education from Pennsylvania State University. Emily loves reading fiction, especially modern Japanese, historical, crime, and philosophical fiction. Her personal writing is inspired by observations of people and nature.

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