
We Burned So Bright
by TJ Klune
Genres: Science FictionPages: 169
Rating:
Synopsis: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 wandering blackhole 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, new friends.
And as the blackhole 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?
I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.
I didn’t really read much about this novella before requesting it on Netgalley, because I’ve enjoyed TJ Klune’s books in the past. The concept is basically that two elderly gay men are travelling on a road trip during the end of the world to do something they feel they have to do, which isn’t completely revealed at first.
Sadly, I felt that it wasn’t very well written, overall. There were infodumps, the various different encounters and epiphanies they had were fairly predictable, and so was the object of their journey. I had only one doubt about exactly what it would be (which I won’t say in case I spoil it for someone else!) but that didn’t really feel like much to hold on for.
More than anything, the concept felt a little goofy. A black hole is going to eat the Earth, really? It doesn’t feel at all realistic, and I get that it’s not meant to actually convince me that it’s going to happen or is likely, but it felt like even Klune wasn’t totally committing to it, to me. He tried to figure out how people would act, and that part isn’t bad, but I think he’d have been more confident and avoided that goofy feel by picking something less… uncertain in details. A meteor would’ve worked better in most ways, apart from the mystical stuff that snuck in toward the end.
Overall, pretty weak tea, to my mind. Klune usually writes sentimentality quite well, but it didn’t come off here, maybe because the details were so weak.
Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)
