ContemporaryAges 1418
By Adam Silvera

They Both Die at the End

Read with caution

Some content parents may want to preview or discuss.

Sign in to save your wishlist and reading history across devices.

Published
2017
Ages
14–18

About the book

About the book

In a world where an organization called Death-Cast can predict when people will die, two teenage boys who are both scheduled to die on the same day spend their last hours together.

AI summary

In a world where an organization called Death-Cast can predict when people will die, two teenage boys who are both scheduled to die on the same day spend their last hours together.

Why parents choose this book

What makes They Both Die at the End worth choosing

An honest, parent-first look at who this book suits, what it offers, and what to know before you buy.

Best for

  • Age range: 14–18 (fits siblings across a range).
  • Reading maturity: Young adultteen protagonists and more nuanced themes.
  • Kids who tend to love it: Contemporary.
  • Personality fit: kids ages 14–18 who enjoy a good story.

Parents love this book because

  • Written by Adam Silvera, whose books parents return to for consistently thoughtful storytelling.

Your child will probably enjoy They Both Die at the End if they…

  • Enjoy stories written for kids around ages 14–18

This book helps develop

Vocabulary, sustained attention, and reading confidence for the 14–18 age band.

Things parents should know

  • Violence: cartoonish or off-page action.
  • Language: occasional mild words for the older end of the band.
  • Sexual content: references or fade-to-black moments.

Reading commitment

Estimated reading time
Varies by reader
Length
Length varies by edition
Difficulty
Young adult
Works as read-aloud
Usually read independently
Good for independent readers
Yes — suits confident readers in the age band

Similar books your child may love

Why we recommend it

We recommend They Both Die at the End for the 14–18 age band with a small heads-up on content — worth previewing or discussing. It leans into contemporary in a way that feels genuine, not formulaic. Adam Silvera's voice is what makes it stick: readable, respectful of kids, and easy to hand to the next child in the family.

Content ratings

Violence1/4
Romance0/4
Language2/4
Scary content0/4
Faith content0/4
Sexual content2/4

Ready to add it to the shelf?

Get They Both Die at the End on Amazon

Affiliate link · we may earn a commission

You'll probably like

Books parents also bought

Similar authors

Authors parents also read