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All the Tomorrows Books in Order

Part ofCarian Cole Books in Order

See the All the Tomorrows books in order by Carian Cole, with quick summaries, series background, reading guidance, and where-to-start tips.

Last updated: June 10, 2026

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Publication Order

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No Tomorrow

by Carian Cole

2018

A young woman falls hard for Blue, a magnetic street musician with a dog and a haunted smile. Years later she finds him famous and still in love with her, but his private battles make their second chance anything but simple.

Series background & context

All the Tomorrows is the part of Carian Cole's catalog that leans hardest into the long ache of first love, second chances, and the question of what love can and cannot fix. The series is built as interconnected standalones, and its mood is clear right away: emotional, messy, hopeful, and very interested in the lives people try to rebuild after heartbreak.

Right now the best way into the series is No Tomorrow, which sets the tone. It follows a young woman who falls for Blue, a magnetic musician she meets in a park while he is playing guitar beside his dog. Their connection is immediate, but the story does not stop at the rush of first love. Time passes. He disappears. Years later she finds him again, now famous, still deeply important to her, and still fighting battles she never fully understood the first time around.

Because the books are interconnected standalones, the focus stays tight on one relationship at a time. That closeness matters. You are not juggling a huge ensemble so much as living inside one love story long enough to see how memory, regret, devotion, and time reshape it.

This is not a light, breezy romance series.

What gives it its shape is the way ordinary tenderness sits next to very hard realities. The early scenes have the warmth of a quiet bench, a song, a shared look, a dog leaning against somebody's leg. Then the story widens into fame, distance, broken promises, mental health struggles, and the difficult work of deciding whether love can survive when life gets complicated. That contrast, between soft beginnings and rougher middle ground, is where these books live.

The music thread matters here, but not in a glossy rock star way. It is less about backstage fantasy and more about the life of an artist who can light up a room while still carrying private pain. The public version of a person and the private version rarely match in this series, and that gap becomes part of the emotional tension.

Healing matters just as much as romance.

If you like big feelings, messy timelines, second chances, and love stories that do not pretend everything can be solved with one grand gesture, All the Tomorrows is worth a look. The promise here is not perfection. It is that even after loss, fear, and years of unfinished business, people may still find a way toward each other.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

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