John Dies at the End

Paperback, 464 pages

Published Oct. 5, 2021 by St. Martin's Griffin.

ISBN:
978-1-250-83056-2
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3 stars (7 reviews)

7 editions

Arrested Development

2 stars

This has the comedy beats of a children's series along the lines of Goosebumps or Animorphs and the language and predilections of a teenage boy, but the subject matter of what should be an adult. Stylistically it reminds me of Snow Crash. A type of angsty adult man-child 'poonin his way through traffic like a cool guy. Failing on purpose and attracting manic pixie dream girls. If you like Deadpool or non sequitur humor like Family Guy, you'll probably be into it but personally I find it really annoying. Glad the author got his bag on this though. Good for you, bro.

It’s complicated

No rating

This book reads like it was written by a late Gen Xer at the turn of the millennium, and by that of course I mean that it has aged terribly. I could not recommend it. But also, I was a white boy in Southern Illinois in the late 90s myself, so I understand where it comes from and cut it more slack that I should. I stuck with it because some friends insist that the rest of the series gets better.

reviewed John Dies at the End by David Wong

Plot-less, eye-roll inducing and at times offensive (dnf)

1 star

Tries to go for funny and modern/internet-ish language, but ends up just being just a mishmash of mentions of the word "penis", disjointed episodes revolving around cthulhu-esque monsters, and a smattering of slurs (both racial and mental-health related) that maybe are meant to "be in character" but seemed gratuitous to me.

I was amused and entertained at first, but after reading a good third of the book I realized that the only ideas the author had were to keep dialing up the literal shit, dicks and the slurs.

avatar for vandermore

rated it

4 stars
avatar for jwentz

rated it

5 stars