They Both Die at the End
by Adam Silvera
They Both Die at the End opens with a near-future premise: a service called Death-Cast calls people on the day they will die and tells them they have 24 hours left. Two sixteen-year-old boys, Mateo Torrez and Rufus Emeterio, receive that call on the same day. Mateo is cautious, anxious, and has mostly lived a sheltered life; Rufus is brash, scarred by past loss, and determined to live loudly. Through an app called Last Friend they match as companions for their End Day and agree to meet in New York City. The novel alternates between Mateo's and Rufus's perspectives, showing how each boy spends his final hours. Mateo begins the day by leaving his comfort zone, making small but meaningful choices that reveal his desire for connection and forgiveness. Rufus guides them through the city with practical energy, seeking moments of joy, confrontation, and reconciliation with people from his past. The two characters complete a mixture of thoughtful and impulsive acts: visiting important places, reaching out to family or former friends, and doing ordinary things that feel urgent when time is limited. As the day progresses, Mateo and Rufus grow from acquaintances into close friends and then into romantic partners, learning about each other's fears and strengths. They help one another face regrets and claim the kinds of experiences they had avoided: Mateo embraces risk and affection, while Rufus accepts vulnerability and forgiveness. Along the way they meet other characters who are also living their final day, and these encounters deepen the novel's portrait of how different people respond to imminent death. The story reaches its emotional culmination on the same night they met, as sudden violence and the realities of their mortality arrive in a way that fulfills the promise of the title. The ending is honest and unflinching, yet it emphasizes the value of the choices Mateo and Rufus made during their last hours. Structurally, the book pairs brisk, time-stamped chapters with text-message exchanges and ephemera, which keeps the pace urgent and highlights the theme that how we use our time matters more than how much time we have.
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