Review Detail

5.0 2
Young Adult Fiction 282
an interesting story on death
(Updated: June 11, 2026)
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
N/A
Writing Style
 
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
Reader reviewed by the book muncher

After Jo-Jo Dyas girlfriend Violet is killed, he doesnt think he has any reason to live anymore. On the morning he plans to commit suicide, he finds a naked dead girl floating in a river, and instead of following through with his original plans, he follows this girl Max as she rounds up the other members of the band she drums for, the Fiendish Lot. But after their impromptu concert, Jo-Jo accidentally completes the task he had wanted to do that morning, thus traveling to where Max and the Fiendish Lot are from, the Afterlife. Jo-Jo is lost in this new world until Max rescues him and shows him the ropes. The Afterlife is a time of second chances, but all Jo-Jo does is tag along the Fiendish Lots band tour and look for Violet. Jo-Jo and the Fiendish Lot is a unique and unforgettable novel about life, death, and acceptance.

I am pleased to say that my high expectations for this novel were exceeded. I immensely enjoyed Auseons unique version of death and the afterlife because it was so creative and entirely unlike any other book Ive read on the same topic. The new world of the Afterlife that Auseon creates is such a perfect setting for Jo-Jos story. From the very first page, I was drawn into Jo-Jos tale and his adventures along with the quirks of the Afterlife and the members of the Fiendish Lot held my interest for the rest of the novel. The majority of Jo-Jos story is an emotional journey as he reflects on his life, his relationships with Violet and Max, and his purpose. Jo-Jo, Max, and even Violet were wonderfully developed and I felt I got to know them rather well. I liked how this novel didnt focus on how Jo-Jo dealt with his own death per se but on how he held onto other aspects of his life; in a way, however, this was paradoxical because Jo-Jo was portrayed as rather selfish. The Fiendish Lots music and its effects on Jo-Jo werent perfectly woven into Jo-Jos tale but it was done well enough that I felt connected. Overall, I was very impressed with this novel.

Jo-Jo and the Fiendish Lot is one of the more unique novels Ive read in a while and is one of my new favorites. Readers who liked Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin will also enjoy this fabulous novel; I actually liked Jo-Jos story better than Elsewhere which is saying something because I loved Elsewhere. Jo-Jo and the Fiendish Lot will be released early March this coming year.

reposted from http://thebookmuncher.blogspot.com
G
Was this review helpful? 0 0

Comments

Already have an account? or Create an account