Dark academia as a genre label covers a lot of ground, most of it superficial. The aesthetic — gothic architecture, candlelight, classical texts — is easy to replicate, and many books do nothing more than replicate it. If We Were Villains is interesting for a different reason: M.L. Rio uses the theatrical setting to make an argument about identity and performance that the plot mechanics then test to destruction. The students at Dellecher Classical Conservatory are not ordinary people who happen to study Shakespeare. They are people who have so thoroughly inhabited the roles assigned to them — the hero, the villain, the ingenue — that when a real crisis arrives, they respond as characters rather than as themselves. The institution does not just provide the atmosphere. It provides the framework that makes the crime possible. The books here share that specific structural concern: elite environments that produce complicity, performance that replaces selfhood, and the specific danger of being very good at pretending.

What Makes Dark Academia Work as Serious Fiction

The failure mode for dark academia is treating the setting as permission for melodrama without consequence. The genre works when the institutional environment is doing the same thing it does in real life — producing people who have been so thoroughly shaped by a system that they cannot see themselves from outside it. Richard Papen in The Secret History cannot evaluate his own complicity because his entire self-concept depends on belonging to a group that requires it. Oliver Marks in If We Were Villains cannot separate who he is from the roles he has performed. That loss of selfhood inside an institution is not just atmospheric. It is the thing the best dark academia fiction is actually about.

The institution in dark academia is not just the setting. It is the mechanism — the system that shapes people into versions of themselves that serve the institution’s needs, and calls that shaping excellence.

The Books

The Secret History cover
The Secret HistoryDonna TarttThe foundational dark academia text and the clearest statement of what the genre is actually about. Richard Papen’s group of Greek students commits murder not from malice but from a combination of aesthetic philosophy, group insularity, and the specific moral blindness that comes from spending too long inside a world that has its own values and no accountability to anything outside them. Tartt’s achievement is making the reader understand how the logic assembled itself step by step, so that the horror is not that intelligent people did something monstrous but that the institution created the conditions for it to seem reasonable.
Ninth House cover
Ninth HouseLeigh BardugoBardugo transplants the dark academia concern with elite institutions to Yale, where the secret societies practice actual magic and the university is structured to ensure the consequences fall on people outside the institution. Galaxy Stern’s position as outsider and monitor — she came from nowhere, she sees everything — gives the novel an angle on elite institutional culture that the insider narrators of The Secret History and If We Were Villains cannot access. The magic is real; so is Bardugo’s argument that privilege is its own kind of magic, producing the same insulation from consequence.
The Atlas Six cover
The Atlas SixOlivie BlakeBlake takes the dark academia conceit — brilliant people selected for an elite institution, one of whom will not survive the selection process — and turns the competition itself into the subject. The six candidates know that one of them will be eliminated, which means every alliance is provisional and every friendship is a risk calculation. The novel is less interested in atmosphere than in the specific psychological effects of sustained high-stakes evaluation: what people become when they have been told they are exceptional and that exceptionalism is the only currency that matters. More thriller-structured than If We Were Villains, with the same dark current underneath.
The Magicians cover
The MagiciansLev GrossmanThe dark academia novel that most directly addresses what elite institutions actually do to the people who succeed in them. Brakebills, the magic school, selects for exceptional talent and then cultivates exceptional misery: the students who pass through it end up with more capability and less purpose than when they arrived. Grossman is doing something specific to If We Were Villains in reverse — where Rio’s students perform roles so completely that they lose themselves, Grossman’s students discover that the self they expected the institution to produce does not exist. Getting everything you wanted from the right institution still leaves the question of what you wanted it for.
The Poppy War cover
The Poppy WarR.F. KuangThe darkest version of the elite academic institution story. Rin aces the imperial exam, earns her place at Sinegard military academy, and discovers that the institution’s purpose — producing warriors, not people — is more literal than she understood. The academy sections of The Poppy War share with If We Were Villains the specific atmosphere of a place where excellence is the only value and where the students’ individual identities are subordinated to the roles the institution assigns. What happens when the institution then deploys those people is the rest of the novel, and it is considerably darker than anything in the dark academia genre proper.
In the Woods cover
In the WoodsTana FrenchThe institutional setting here is the Dublin Murder Squad rather than an academic one, but French is asking the same question as Rio: what does a person become when they have spent their career performing a professional identity, and what happens when the performance and the person split? Rob Ryan, the narrator, is unreliable in precisely the way that Oliver Marks is — not because he is lying but because the self he presents is a managed construction, and the novel is about the consequences of that management. For dark academia readers who want the same psychological architecture in a procedural format rather than a campus novel.

Who This Is For

Readers who finished If We Were Villains and found that the Shakespearean setting was doing something more interesting than atmosphere — that it was the specific argument of the novel rather than its costume. Also literary fiction readers who have avoided dark academia because of its reputation for style over substance and who want evidence that the genre is capable of serious work. The thriller and mystery and fantasy catalogues both have further entries in this direction.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is dark academia as a genre? A: Dark academia describes fiction set in elite academic or intellectual institutions — usually universities, conservatories, or secret schools — where the pursuit of knowledge or excellence produces morally compromised or dangerous situations. The aesthetic involves gothic settings, classical texts, and a specific atmosphere of beautiful decay. The best dark academia fiction uses the institutional setting as an argument about complicity and identity rather than purely as atmosphere.

Q: Is The Secret History the best dark academia novel? A: The Secret History is the most formally accomplished and the one that most completely earns its status as the genre’s foundational text. If We Were Villains is a strong second, distinguished by its theatrical specificity. Ninth House is the best of the recent wave. All three are worth reading, in that order if you are new to the genre.

Q: What makes If We Were Villains different from The Secret History? A: Both novels are about a group of students in an elite institution who commit or are complicit in a murder, and both use the retrospective confessional structure. If We Were Villains is more interested in theatrical performance as a model for identity — the specific way actors lose themselves in roles — while The Secret History is more interested in the moral philosophy that justified the act. Both repay reading; they complement each other more than they duplicate each other.

Q: Are these books appropriate for readers who are not familiar with Shakespeare? A: If We Were Villains is saturated in Shakespeare and rewards readers who know the plays, but the emotional content works independently of that knowledge. The Secret History uses classical Greek texts in a similar way. Neither requires prior knowledge to be gripping; both reward it.

Not sure which of these is right for you specifically? The Pagesmith quiz matches you to books based on your mood, pacing preference, and reading goals, not bestseller lists. Takes two minutes.