A heart-wrenching standalone novel by #1 New York Times bestselling author TJ Klune, We Burned So Bright follows an elder gay couple on an end-of-the-world road-trip.
The road stretched out before them. No other cars, just the headlights on the blacktop. Above, the cracked moon in a kaleidoscope sky….
Husbands Don and Rodney have lived a good long life. Together they’ve experienced the highest highs of love and family, and lows so low that they felt like the end of the world.
Now, the world is ending for real. A rogue black hole is coming for Earth and in a month everything and everyone they’ve ever known will be gone.
Suddenly, after 40 years together, Don and Rodney are out of time. They’re in a race against the clock to make it from Maine to Washington State to take care of some unfinished business before it’s all over.
On the road they meet those who refuse to believe death is coming and those who rush to meet it. But there are also people living their final days as best they know how—impromptu weddings, bright burning bonfires, shared meals, and new friends.
And as the black hole draws near, among ball lightning and under a cracked moon in a kaleidoscope sky, Don and Rodney will look back on their lives and ask if their best was good enough.
Is it enough to burn bright if nothing comes from the ashes?
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
TJ KLUNE is a Lambda Literary Award-winning author (Into This River I Drown) and an ex-claims examiner for an insurance company. His novels include The House in the Cerulean Sea and The Extraordinaries. Being queer himself, TJ believes it's important—now more than ever—to have accurate, positive, queer representation in stories.
This is one of those rare books that leave you utterly speechless — the kind that makes you exhale a long, trembling sigh, your gut wrenched, your eyes burning with tears. You sit there, staring at the wall, unable to move or even find words because they’re all lodged somewhere deep in your throat. I truly loved this book as much as it hurt me. It’s devastating, poetic, and breathtaking all at once — an epic romance at the end of the world, where love becomes both a compass and a curse.
The story follows Don and Rodney, two men who have spent forty years together, surviving a lifetime of battles — from social stigma and political pressure to the loss of dear friends during the HIV crisis. Rodney, the tougher and more analytical one, and Don, the sentimental and outgoing half of their pair, have built a life defined by love and endurance. Now, in their mid-seventies, they face the one obstacle no one can overcome: the end of everything. A black hole is approaching Earth. Humanity has only weeks left.
Instead of waiting for the inevitable in the quiet safety of their home, Don and Rodney decide to hit the road in their battered old RV — a vehicle that’s seen better days but still carries decades of memories. Their mission? To fulfill one last promise. But what exactly are they searching for — a person, a destination, a final act of love? The answer unfolds slowly, and the mystery surrounding their journey makes every mile feel achingly precious.
This isn’t a fast read — nor should it be. Every chapter deserves to be savored, every encounter lingered on. Don and Rodney meet strangers along their road to nowhere: a pregnant woman clinging to hope, a young girl who’s lost her first love in a massacre, a queer couple trying to survive in chaos, violent souls lashing out in despair. Each story adds another layer of heartbreak and humanity. And then there’s Jeremy — his part of the book completely shattered me. I screamed, I cried, I sat in silence. The encounter with Amelia filled me with unbearable tension and sorrow, amplifying the emotional gravity of their already haunting journey.
By the time I turned the last page, I knew — without hesitation — this book deserved five blazing, end-of-the-world stars.
It’s tragic yet tender, reflective yet raw — a meditation on love, mortality, and what it means to hold onto someone when the universe itself is falling apart. Get ready for a good, ugly cry. Keep a mountain of tissues nearby. This novel will break your heart open, but it will also remind you how beautifully fragile being human truly is.
Overall:
Powerful. Sentimental. Unforgettable. A masterpiece of love, loss, and the quiet bravery of choosing to live — even when the world is ending.
A huge thanks to NetGalley and Tor Publishing for providing this ARC of such a deeply emotional and soul-stirring novel by one of my favorite authors, in exchange for my honest review.
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My enjoyment of TJ Klune continues to baffle me. I don’t really enjoy much fantasy and I don’t like overly sentimental stories. Klune’s are generally both but, for me, he gets that mixture EXACTLY right, I guess, and this new book, out in April, is no exception (I only read Klune at all as part of the Book Riot Read Harder Challenge and if I remember correctly I ended up reading two different books, two consecutive years. Challenges are fun!).
Don and Rodney are a gay, married couple who have been together forty years. They are charming, if a tiny bit stereotypical. They are making a cross-country trip in their old RV from their home in Maine to Washington state to do something Very Important regarding their son, but we, the readers, don’t know what that is.
Oh, and did I mention the world is ending? Soon. Within a few weeks. We’ve known for about a year that a black hole will be coming to take everything in our solar system. The book tells of Rodney and Don’s final journey and it’s both sad, scary, sweet (a little too much? Yes, of course.) and ultimately triumphant. Really enjoyed getting to know these gentlemen, their fellow travelers and the book.
Currently writing this with tears in my eyes. This is pure magic, and TJ Klune has done it again.
Such a fantastic use of pages and word count. Only 150 pages, and every single word meant something and was important to the story and characters.
I am usually a short novel hater because there just isn't enough time to build up the world or the characters, but Klune did it masterfully here. The setting was, of course, our own world, so that was easier, but even just describing the way the world was ending was done so expertly and efficiently, but also not overindulgent, and used as a way to draw emotions. It was very matter-of-fact, and I loved that.
As for the characters, phenomenal. I was worried I wasn't going to care for the characters as much, since sometimes it is hard to believe in a relationship that formed off-page. But every conversation and mental note really made you believe in this effortless romance. It was so touching and meaningfully done. There are a few side characters and side storylines that you come across as our couple travels, and it is interesting how each person brings something new to the storyline. Some of them are absolutely gut-wrenching, others funny, and others make you think about the best kind of human existence.
Beyond characters and setting, this book truly prompts thought. Klune uses these characters expertly as devices to prompt reflection on the themes he is trying to convey, and boy, does this book make you think.
The ending was absolutely everything. You don't know why these two are traveling until the last chapter, and the way that it is explained and the backstory given there is so perfectly timed and brought everything together at the exact right moment. I finished the book crying, which is very rare. The last few lines were perfect, and I wouldn't change a single thing about this book.
5/5 stars. Incredible.
Thank you to NetGalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
“We're all in this moment together. For perhaps the first time in human history, we're all experiencing the same thing. It doesn't matter what color you are. Your background. Your beliefs. Your heritage. Who you love. Everyone, right now, is all the same. There's something beautiful about that."
When the literal end of the world is mere weeks away, what lengths would you go to in order to fulfill a promise? This is exactly what Don and Rodney grapple with as an errant black hole threatens to rip the earth to shreds. We follow them along their cross country road trip, meeting a variety of people along the way who struggle in their own ways to come to terms with the end of the world.
Despite the urgency in their journey, the book’s pacing and tone are more slow, solemn, and contemplative. We are privy to Don’s internal thoughts, as well as flashbacks from the past that shed light into what the family has endured. In true Klune fashion, the writing made me feel so many things as I read, and I’ll fully admit I devoured the entire book in one sitting!
Thank you so much to Pan Macmillan Export and Tor/Forge for the advanced copy of this book!
Content warning: there is some heavy adoption trauma that occurs in the book, so be aware of that going in
Update may 14: Holy Moly T.J.klune is Sooo backkkkk. As always, I add his books in a blink of an eye, but damn he really went with queer family with black hole??! I AM SAT.
Wasn't sure what to expect with this one. Having read several of Klune's amazing works, I have remained steadfast in liking my initial read of his best. By a pretty substantial margin. Under the Whispering Door had it all. Woven together masterfully. Characters, fantasy, life's reflections, guiding others, feeling lost-- and all of the emotions along the way.. and he made it seem so effortless. While turning pages fast and furiously.. and then heavily and tenderly.
From there, T.J. has crafted a good many tales that have been enjoyable. Several, even really great. .. but, nothing approaching the supremacy of Whispering Door.
Admittedly Whispering Door-biased here :) but have to say, We Burned So Bright feels ooohhhh so close!
It is heavy and thoughtful and chocked full of amazing moments throughout. Seeing a more 'down-to-earth'? .. 'ordinary'? premise and reflective journey set more in a real-life setting-- besides the end of world fast-approaching black hole :) , I guess.. early pages had me wondering how he'd treat the development of 2 old gentlemen :) He had me questioning whether their accumulation of Life and their reflections along the way would be believable. Would it be as Klune-Powerful? TJ-Touching and emotive? all in a way that not only resonates, but seems wholly believable? (Not to mention, scrambling away on an urgent mission, racing ahead of a fantastical Black Hole game of chase.)
He nailed it. On so many levels. The nuance and balance.. and interplay.. what was seen.. said.. left unsaid.. felt.. circulating and bubbling back to the top.. instigating lost moments and painful outcries that are still as raw as they were years ago for Don and Rodney..
Maybe, by reading Under the Whispering Door first, I will 'guard' it and protect its special place in my heart. Maybe my own timing in life's adventure will not allow for any of his others to resonate just quite as magically... and, trying to hold those biases at bay, We Burned So Bright comes pushing its way onto T.J. Klune's top shelf works. Nestling itself right beside Whispering Door.. and holding out a tissue towards each other for clearing up the sniffles.
Thank you, NetGalley and TOR Publishing Group, for the ARC. Honored to have had this opportunity, emotional engagement, and sharing heaping praise.
“clutching each other under a shifting sky, they laughed.”
A month before the world will end, Don and Rodney take a cross country roadtrip.
A quick but impactful read. I appreciated the journey, the characters, and the ending. Despite being less than 200 pages, it covered so much ground literally in a roadtrip but also in how different people respond to the end of the world. So many perspectives - right, wrong, and indifferent. And yes, these characters had some regret but ultimately, it was what it was. Live and let live.
READ FOR - LGBTQ Representation - End of The World / Apocalyptic - Cross Country Roadtrip - Elderly MCs
Thank you to the publisher for my free copy in exchange for my honest review.
Thank you to netgalley and the publisher for an early copy of this book! I love tj klunes writing and when I saw this one I knew I had to read it! This book had you feeling all the feelings. Don and Rodney were fun characters to read. It’s the end of the world what would you be thinking and feeling?! Who will you meet along the way, what will you do in your final moments? What kind of regrets will you possibly have. This book was heavy in parts especially the end. I really enjoyed this read!
Early on, this book had a lot of potential. You hit me with a “I think about you all the time.” “I’m right here.” “I know. But still.” and I have no choice but to read on.
However. This damn book was so on the nose for no reason. Why are we talking about trickle down economics. In a serious manner. There was a lot of nuance to be had here and none of it was had. Especially when it came to the composite characters representing different people’s reactions to the end of the world. And then also. The whole Covid commentary of it all.
I have very complicated feelings about this one. I wanted to love it but there wasn’t enough character development or story telling. It felt like show rather than tell, especially in the chapter about LGBTQ history. I also think the depiction of what adoption of a kid with trauma can look like was accurate and not sugar coated and yet there wasn’t enough time taken to tell a story that I was invested in. Overall a rushed and disappointing read from an author I love.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I enjoyed the end of this more than anything, but the parts along the trip felt very monologue heavy. I enjoyed the stories the characters they met told, but it felt like huge swaths of the book were characters just delivering a monologue then moving on. I think it could have employed a little bit more show than tell in that case.
Finished in under 24 hours with a very packed day in between. I'm gonna need to sit with this one before a full review though. I just need a minute. *sigh* ______________________ TJ Klune has a new book?! How fast can I sign up to read it and what can I clear off my schedule so I can sit down and devour it in the way the universe intended? Turns out that yes, TJ Klune has a new book and "I'm gonna make time" were the answers! Started it Monday night, had to be an adult and do things on Tuesday before I could get back to it Tuesday evening. I hated that.
This was a relatively short read, and I wanted this book to be longer. I wanted to know more about their lives, I wanted to know everything I could so I could make things different for them. But much like in real life, we can't always make things different. The characters, even minor ones, were in my head so much and the weight of their situations was on my heart. I had to get back to it and finish it. Once I flipped the final page though, I didn't know how to talk about it without giving away parts of the story and it turns out that wanting the story to keep going might have been the whole point.
Don and Rodney are "elder gays" and have lived a life of love together. But they've also faced struggles, some because they are gay, but mostly because they're human and humans are faced with the highest triumphs of life as well as the deepest sorrows. With the ability to love comes the ability to lose, and sometimes we lose so deeply it alters how we love.
So how does one prepare for the end of the world? We can doomsday prep all we want, but emotional preparedness is never something you hear about. How would you face it? Would you be like one family Don and Rodney encountered? Would you take another path like Amelia? Or would you be like Don and Rodney and try to finish that one thing that you have to do?
Hear this loud and clear - this book is dark. Not a "what's jumping out at me?!" kind of dark. The kind of dark that lingers after life hurts us. This is the kind of emotional rollercoaster that life actually throws at us. And in true TJ Klune fashion, the ride was perfection.
Trigger warnings for mental illness, suicide, drug use, gun violence, murder.
My thanks to the author, the publisher, and NetGalley for an advance reader copy in exchange for my honest review.
Why is T.J. Klune so good at hitting you right where it hurts?
As much as this book was about grief and loss and the literal end of the world, it still managed to be a warm, cozy hug full of love and family and friendship and hope as well. And, as anyone who has read T.J.'s other books knows, that intersection is exactly where he shines.
We Burned So Bright follows Don and Rodney as they travel across the country to fulfill an important promise leading up to the end of the world, courtesy of a giant black hole that's about to destroy Earth. Throughout their journey, they meet an array of characters all dealing with the impending doom in their own ways, ranging from anger and violence to despair to peace and acceptance and joy for the little things, all while grappling with their own complicated feelings about their lives and relationships and histories.
While I perhaps didn't connect with this quite as much as I have some of T.J.'s previous books, it had a lot of heart and emotion packed into less than 200 pages and left me feeling a little contemplative and very melancholy. I especially enjoyed the chapter in which Don and Rodney met a young lesbian couple and talked about their experiences with queerness, both similar and different across generations. I loved the relatability of that and how well it captured the feeling of connecting with other queer people, something I know T.J. can also understand deeply.
If you've read and liked T.J.'s previous books, and especially his heavier ones, like Under the Whispering Door, I think you'll have a good (read: emotionally charged) time with this one, too.
Thank you to NetGalley and Tor for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review!
Thank you NetGalley and Tor Publishing for an Advanced Reader's Copy in exchange for a review.
The story follows Don and Rodney, a gay septuagenarian couple, making their way coast-to-coast from Maine to Washington, hoping to carry out one final important task before the world is swallowed into a black hole. Throughout their journey, we learn about their history together, why they're going to Washington state, and meet a cast of characters that help them navigate what their time spent on Earth ultimately means.
This was absolutely heart-wrenching. There were many (many, many, many) moments of ugly crying, audible sobbing, and devastating heartbreak but also moments of light-hearted chuckles, smiling, and joyous levity. Apart from the deep sadness, Klune also offers deep reflections on how incredibly lucky we are to be living on this planet and the amazing moments, experiences, and relationships we created of it; there were many times I gasped at how beautiful human life was described. Intermixed with these moments of sadness, joy, and reflection, are scenes of horror and harrowing experiences as the world comes to an end. I felt uncomfortable, scared, upset, and depressed for humanity. Any novel that can make me think deeply, feel a gamut of emotions, and offer a plot that is filled with ups and downs that mean something is a win in my book.
This will probably be one of my favourite reads of 2026 and will be on many "Best of" lists around the net. Pick this up in April when it comes out.
4.5 I had to come back to up my rating and write out some thoughts because this has stayed with me days after reading.
This novel tells the story of loving husbands Don and Rodney, who have shared a long and storied life together. Now they are crossing the country at the end of the world on a mission of unfinished business.
The mystery of what that unfinished business is hangs over the story in a way that was a bit distracting for me but did it's job of keeping me hooked.
To me the real magic here lies, as it often does, in the journey more than the destination. I love a "lets go on a trip and share meals and time with others along the way" kind of tale. This trip has higher stakes than most and the people you meet run the gambit of reactions to those high stakes. I found these varying reactions to be very interesting and it, of course, invites you to consider how you would face the end of the world.
*Remind me to put a quote here once it's published*
This hit close to home in a way I didn't expect as I've heard my share of end of the world tales. However this one left me with more hope than most. That is completely due to the relationship between Don and Rodney. We are mostly in Don's perspective but you can feel the long and loving life that these two have shared together. We hear them look back on their lives together, from their joy in falling in love, to their heartbreak in their most tragic moments. Their love and humor brings you through the rather bleak outcome this book promises at the start, and leaves you feeling hopeful and appreciative for those you love.
As an elderly gay couple, Rodney and Don have been through and seen a lot. The end of the world is new to them though. They go on a cross country roadtrip on a mission with the little time they have left.
This little novella packs a lot of powerful and conflicting emotions in it. The ending is a major emotional climax, as all of the history is revealed and brings meaning to Don and Rodney’s journey. Their journey was incredible, as they met other individual and couples and we see the different ways people react to the end of the world. This is a good one but there’s no way you’ll close it with a dry eye. It’s sad but also heartwarming.
“You have a choice. You get to choose who you love. No matter what happens next, no one can take that away from you.”
Read this if you like: -End of the world stories -Road trips with a mission -Emotional journeys -Elderly main characters
T.J. Klune, how dare you. As is your superpower, this book literally ripped apart my heart while simultaneously making me fall in love with Don and Rodney. Their marriage, their struggles, their reminiscing as they faced the end of the world were beautiful and full of anguish. I loved every minute of this book and never wanted it to end. This book makes you question, how do you face the end of the world without regrets?
Thank you so much to NetGalley and the publisher for a chance to read this gorgeous book.