Few things intertwine so infamously than sex, death, and rock and roll. Auseon weaves all three in this tale of Jo-Jo Dyas, a Baltimore burnout whose suicide attempt is interrupted when a dead girl floating in a river stands up and kisses him. Her name is Max, and she’s the drummer for the Fiendish Lot, the best punk band in the Afterlife. She and her fellow musicians are briefly “life-tripping” back to the mortal world to test out some new material. Tragedy sends Jo-Jo to the Afterlife, where he struggles against administrative red tape in his quest to find an old murdered girlfriend (while Auseon makes brilliant use of footnotes explaining the death of everyone Jo-Jo meets). Soon Jo-Jo’s touring with the Fiendish Lot and pondering the strange concept of romance with an undead drummer. Despite the eye-catching cover art and outlandish premise, the tone is melancholic. It’s also a bit overlong, but music-obsessed teens will respond to Auseon’s firm grasp of the transformative and life-changing power of a kick-ass rock show. Grades 8-11. --Daniel Kraus
Product Description
There is a life after death, but only for the terminally cool. . . .
Jo-Jo Dyas doesn't believe he has any reason to live, but then he finds the surprisingly lively dead girl in the culvert and she convinces him otherwise. She and her punk band, the Fiendish Lot, come from the Afterlife, a strange, colorless place where souls sometimes pause on the journey between this world and the next. When Jo-Jo follows her there, he gets a chance to make right all the things that have gone wrong in his life . . . but only if he can figure out how before he fades away into nothing. Maybe the answer lies in Jo-Jo's late-breaking realization: Being alive is kind of cool.
Rude, raw, and blisteringly funny, Andrew Auseon's new novel is like one of those insanely catchy songs that you can't forget and won't want to. So pay attention: The afterlife you save may be your own.