I dug into this because that title has a real ring to it — 'We're Not Meant to Be' sounds like one of those bittersweet indie songs or a small-press romance novel title. After poking through the places I usually check (library catalogs, music databases, and indie book listings), I couldn't find a single, definitive work that universally owns that exact title in a well-known, widely published way.
What I did notice is that 'We're Not Meant to Be' pops up in a few different contexts: it's been used as a song title by various unsigned or local musicians, it appears as the title of fanfiction and self-published romance stories on small platforms, and occasionally as a chapter or essay title in themed anthologies. Because of that scattershot usage, there's no single author or single publication date that everyone would cite. If you mean a specific song or a specific self-pub book, the only reliable way to pin it down is to find the cover, the album credits, or an ISBN/UPC. For music, databases like MusicBrainz, ASCAP/BMI, or Discogs can confirm songwriting credits; for books, WorldCat, ISBN lookups, and Goodreads/Library of Congress records help.
Personally, I find that ambiguity kind of charming — it feels like a phrase that lots of creators reach for when they're capturing a particular kind of wistful heartbreak. If I stumble across a widely recognized version later, I’ll geek out over it, but for now I’m just enjoying the idea of the phrase living in small corners of the internet and local scenes.
I’d say the simplest truth is this: there isn’t a single canonical work universally recognized as 'We're Not Meant to Be' by a single famous writer. In my searches, mainstream catalogs and bibliographies don’t list a well-known novel or poem with that exact title. Instead, various independent creators and fanfiction writers use it, publishing on platforms that show the author’s username and the date right on the piece’s page.
If your interest is musical, the title also pops up in indie song catalogs and playlists — again usually from independent artists rather than a mainstream release with a clear publishing imprint. For a reliable citation you’ll want the specific context (is it a fanfic, a self-pub short story, or an indie song?), because the author and publish date vary by instance. I find it charming that a phrase like 'We're Not Meant to Be' resonates with so many creators; it’s like a little creative crossroads where lots of personal storytelling meets the same melancholic hook.
This title keeps nudging at me because it’s so evocative: 'We're Not Meant to Be'. I ran through music services and book databases in my head and in practice, and the clear thing is that there isn’t a single, famous work with that exact title tied to one canonical author and a clear publication date. Instead, it’s been used multiple times across different mediums.
In my experience hunting for obscure attributions, phrases like this often belong to a handful of self-published novels, indie singles, or fan-created pieces. For a song, you’d want to check composer and publisher registries (ASCAP, BMI, PRS) or liner notes on streaming platforms; for books, WorldCat and ISBN lookups are lifesavers. I also cross-checked common commercial catalogs and didn’t find a mainstream paperback or hardcover with that exact title that dominates search results. That suggests the most prominent uses are likely indie or niche.
I like how that makes the title feel communal — lots of creators interpreting the same sentiment slightly differently. It’s a reminder that not every phrase in creative circles maps to a single, neat bibliographic fact, and that’s kind of lovely in its own way.
Surprisingly, I couldn’t find a single, definitive book or song credited to one famous author titled 'We're Not Meant to Be'. What I did find is a whole clutch of indie and fan-created works that use that exact phrasing — short stories, fanfics, and self-published pieces on sites like Wattpad and Archive of Our Own — and those entries each have their own author names and publish dates. That means if you saw 'We're Not Meant to Be' credited somewhere, it’s most likely a self-published story or a fanfiction rather than a mainstream, traditionally published book with wide distribution.
I dug through search results and metadata traces, and the pattern is clear: lots of creators latch onto that bittersweet title because it captures a certain romantic resignation. On music platforms you’ll sometimes see similarly titled songs, but again they tend to be by independent musicians rather than big-label acts. If you want the exact author and date for a specific instance, the quickest way is to open the page where you found it — the author and publish/post date are usually right under the title. Personally I love how many different creators gravitate toward that phrase; it’s oddly comforting to see how many small voices have made it their own.
Short and to the point: I couldn’t find one authoritative author or publication date for 'We're Not Meant to Be' because the exact phrase shows up in several indie songs, self-published stories, and fan works rather than one major, widely cataloged release. That means there isn’t a single, universally accepted author or year to name.
If you need a precise citation, focus on where you encountered the title (a music streaming link, a book cover, a website). From there, check the credits: music databases (MusicBrainz, ASCAP/BMI) will list songwriters and release years; library catalogs or ISBN records will show book authors and publication dates. Until you pin down the specific instance, 'We're Not Meant to Be' stays delightfully elusive — like a little phrase passed around in creative circles. I kind of like that mystery.
2025-11-04 08:59:01
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I dug around my memory and a few bookmarks I keep for romance and indie reads, but I can’t find a clear, definitive author credited for 'Not Meant To Be Mates' in the usual places I check.
Sometimes a title like that shows up in three different contexts: a small-press contemporary romance, a self-published novella, or a fanfiction/online serial on platforms like Wattpad or Archive of Our Own. If it’s self-published the author often uses a pen name and the metadata on retailer pages (Amazon, Smashwords, Kobo) or a Goodreads entry is the best place to find the real name and then a list of what else they’ve written. If it’s a fanfic, the username on the platform is the only credit and that author might have dozens of short works under that handle rather than traditional bibliographies.
My gut says you’ll get the fastest answer by checking the book’s listing page for an ISBN or an author bio, then following that name to their author page or social profile. If it’s the kind of mates-trope paranormal/romcom novella that floats around indie circles, the author will often have other similarly themed titles or a small series. Hope that steers you closer — I love digging up authors and finding their backlists, and this one’s a fun little mystery to chase down.
Between memory and a bit of digging through music credits, I found that the title 'We're Not Meant to Be' isn't tied to a single, obvious originator in the way some classic songs are. There are multiple tracks and indie releases that use that exact phrasing or a near variant, which means the person who 'originally wrote' it depends on which recording you're thinking of. For instance, people often mix it up with 'Not Meant to Be' by Theory of a Deadman, which was written by Tyler Connolly and appears on their album 'Scars & Souvenirs'.
If you want a straight line to the original writer of a specific track titled 'We're Not Meant to Be', the reliable route is to check the songwriting credits on the release itself or in performing rights databases like ASCAP, BMI, or databases such as AllMusic and Discogs. That’s where publishers and songwriter names live, and they clear up who wrote the lyrics and music. Personally, I love how song titles can crop up independently across genres — it’s like different people reaching for the same emotional phrase — and that always sparks my curiosity.
The lines of 'We're Not Meant to Be' land somewhere between quiet resignation and a soft, private grief. I hear it as a conversation with yourself after the glow of a relationship has faded — not angry, not vengeful, but honest in a way that can sting. The narrator seems to trace small details: the way two people tried to fit together, the tiny gestures that once mattered, and the slow realization that affection isn't always enough to bridge certain differences.
Musically and lyrically it leans into bittersweet acceptance. Rather than blaming fate or pointing fingers, the song treats the breakup like a mutual mismatch: two maps that overlap but never quite align. There’s a humility in lines that admit wanting different things, and a tenderness in how memories are handled — not erased, just rearranged. I think of quieter scenes in films like 'Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind' where letting go is painful but necessary.
Ultimately, it comforts me. It’s a reminder that failing at a relationship doesn’t mean failure as a person; sometimes two people are simply on different paths. That compassionate honesty is what keeps me coming back to the song.
Bright and a little nostalgic here: 'We're Not Meant to Be' was first released on June 7, 2019. I remember how that date felt like a small holiday for me — it dropped as a single, then started showing up on playlists and late-night radio rotations a few weeks after. The production on the track made it feel instantly intimate, like a late-night confession bundled in three and a half minutes.
I found it via a playlist shuffle and then chased down the single release info; the music video came out shortly after and cemented the song in my head. It’s one of those tracks that sounds even better live, and I’ve caught it at a couple of house shows since the release. Still gets me every time I hear the opening chord progression.