Monday, March 16, 2026

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

 


Reviewed by Jeanne


After the initial reaction of “Wait, what?” I found this to be a clever and engaging book.  Jennings, best known for his gig as host of Jeopardy!, has compiled many, many different versions of an afterlife from many different sources. Of course, mythology and religion lead the list, with Jennings describing many different beliefs from Native American to Norse, but he moves on to other versions of the afterlife as depicted in books, films, television, music, and more.

It’s a fun book to dip into at any point, though a handy index is provided in case you’d like to find out what the afterlife is like in, oh, Marvel Comics or the movie Beetlejuice. Books include not only Dante’s The Divine Comedy but The Five People You Meet in Heaven  and The Lovely Bones. Visions of the afterlife are also depicted in shows like The Twilight Zone  and Curb Your Enthusiasm. Jennings even remembers My Mother the Car.

While this is a lighthearted book, I enjoyed a lot of the miscellaneous information Jennings tosses in, such as titles of several stories in which ghosts think they are still alive, or the origins of the image of death as a carriage ride. (Emily Dickinson I knew, but the Coen Brothers?) That’s the real delight of this book: the connections Jennings makes across centuries and genres. Well, that and his sense of humor.

This paperback edition comes with a bonus: the “Afterlife Planner,” a flowchart which starts “You have died.  Sorry for your loss.” Then you decide what you want to do next—stay on earth or move on? Each decision brings up more decisions, until you reach a destination page number that describes the afterlife you have chosen. For example, if you want to stay on earth but not in your old house, you have several choices from there. Pick-up baseball? You’ll find yourself in Iowa in Field of Dreams. Want to move on and face judgement? From whom? God or gods? Are you Klingon? Then go to page 234 for descriptions of Klingon afterlife in Sto-vo-kor or Gre’thor.

Whether you want just read selections or entire categories or play “Choose Your Own Afterlife Adventure,” this light-hearted book is a good way to spend an hour or maybe an eternity.

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