cover image 100 Places to See After You Die: A Travel Guide to the Afterlife

100 Places to See After You Die: A Travel Guide to the Afterlife

Ken Jennings. Scribner, $27.99 (304p) ISBN 978-1-5011-3158-5

Jeopardy! former contestant and current host Jennings (Planet Funny) explores the afterlife as depicted in mythology, religion, literature, and popular culture in this informative and irreverent faux guidebook. The advice touches on “when to go” (the Chinese underworld of Diyu is best visited during the “full moon of the seventh month”), which celebrities one might spot (in South Park’s “smoky, lava-filled” hell, the list includes Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy), and recommendations for food and lodging. While Jennings’s tongue is firmly planted in his cheek throughout—he advises at the outset, “It’s never too early to... start making travel plans. Eternity is an awfully long time to end up in the wrong place”—he ventures beyond the humorous to explore broader questions about death, as when he examines how notions of the afterlife mirror a culture’s living realities. For example, when China was “building out its own massive civil service” during the Qin dynasty, the deceased were often “buried with documents addressed to afterlife registrars, certifying their possessions, legal status, [and] tax exemptions.” Jennings’s breezy approach and exhaustive knowledge allow him to range from Twin Peaks to Dante’s Divine Comedy with ease, and even casual readers who dip in intermittently will be enlightened. Anyone curious about the great beyond should take a look. (June)