A GOODREADS CHOICE AWARD NOMINEE 2024A road trip through America that is equal parts hilarious and terrifying. Jason understands humanity better than most, and it's inspiring that his diagnosis is ultimately optimistic.-- Daniel O'Brien, Senior Writer, Last Week Tonight with John OliverI was hooked from the first page. If I'm honest, from the first sentence or two. Jason has a rare gift for delivering High Weirdness coated in a sticky layer of real life, deeply relatable shit that forces you to see yourself in whatever weirdo or maniac he introduces. It's a rare gift, but he's got a lot of those. You should read this book.-- Robert Evans, Host of Behind the BastardsJason Pargin's curse is a brain that can make sense of what we're all living through. His gift is an ability to take the key elements -paranoia, screen addiction, deep loneliness, fear of the end times -and hocus-pocus them into a comic thriller. Illuminatus! for an even weirder time, and with much cooler cars.-- David Weigel, national political reporter, SemaforJason Pargin has a unique grasp on all the ways our relationship with information technology has warped our brains and our society as a whole. This latest work is a fun, socially relevant, and propulsive work of satire. Well, mostly satire: The way its characters fabricate dangerous narratives out of whatever information they can access is terrifyingly true to life. I felt personally called out a dozen times and I loved every page of it.-- Matthew Kitchen, Editor, ChronJason Pargin's Zoey Ashe series is the dystopias of Margaret Atwood meets Parks and Recreation, a fast-paced, witty and much-needed shot in the arm to the genre. Funny without being flippant, cynical without being insincere, this is one of the best ongoing series out there today.-Lindsay Ellis, New York Times bestselling author of Axiom's EndWithin the snarky humor is an incisive commentary on social media and the state of our connected world, and a story about trauma and how people lash out when they're hurt...This isn't just a funny tale of inept supernatural investigators; it's a story of people struggling through pain to find a better path. Pargin offers us a welcome note of hope.-- Booklist[Pargin] is a great storyteller, and he imparts warmth, nuance and humanity in a way that amplifies his vibrant humour. in grim times he will lift your spirits.-The Big IssueWith verve and velocity, the story moves...one cinematic set piece after another, strung together with twisty fun and wit.-The New York Times Book ReviewLike Jonathan Swift for the internet age, [Pargin]'s novel offers an engrossing journey and razor-sharp wit inside of an uncanny prediction of an American future. His newest is only more proof that he will be remembered as one of today s great satirists.-NerdistAll right, grab some popcorn and strap in. We're in for another profane and funny roller-coaster ride from [Pargin].-Kirkus ReviewsA sofa clutching read from beginning to end, and a great look at the constantly growing world of social networking.-Starbust, 9 out of 10 starsThe comedic and crackling dialogue also brings a whimsical flair to the story, making it seem like an episode of AMC's The Walking Dead written by Douglas Adams of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.-...Imagine a mentally ill narrator describing the zombie apocalypse while drunk, and the end result is unlike any other book of the genre. Seriously, dude, touch it and read it.-Washington PostViolence, soy sauce and zombie survivalists abound in this clever and funny sequel to John Dies at the End (2009). One of the great things about discovering new writers, especially in the narrow range of hybrid-genre comedic novels, is realizing that they're having just as much fun making this stuff up as you are reading it. Sitting squarely with the likes of S.G. Browne and Christopher Moore, the pseudonymous [Pargin] must be pissing himself laughing at his own writing, even as he's giving fans an even funnier, tighter and justifiably insane entry in the series.... The humor here is unforced and good-naturedly gory. Anyone who enjoyed the recent films The Cabin in the Woods or Tucker & Dale vs. Evil will find themselves right at home. An upcoming (cult?) film adaptation of John Dies at the End promises to lure new readers. A joyful return to the paroxysms of laughter lurking in the American Midwest.-KirkusThe rare genre novel that manages to keep its sense of humor strong without ever diminishing the scares; David is a consistently hilarious narrator whose one-liners and running commentary are sincere in a way that makes the horrors he confronts even more unsettling.-The Onion AV ClubJohn Dies at the End is like an H.P. Lovecraft tale if Lovecraft were into poop and fart jokes.-Fangoria