“Pick this up if you’re looking for pretentious theatre vibes that will have you addicted.”

If We Were Villains is such an utterly engrossing read, that I felt the urge to turn back to the first page and reread it as soon as I was done. It has all the compelling elements, starting with seven theatre kids and a murder. We are fascinated by the dark academia aesthetic: the fancy boarding schools, rich messed-up kids, addiction to art and Shakespeare. We are riveted to the pages, walking back in time to unfold the mystery alongside these characters we grow attached to, despite their flaws. The prose is thick in pretentiousness and Shakespeare language and yet, even as a reader who isn’t educated on that, it pulls you into their obsessive world more. We are riveted to the pages, anchored by the intensity and regret laced in each sentence. There are also underlying themes of how we imitate art and vice versa, the danger of losing touch with reality, the consequences of neglect, and so on. M.L Rio delivers a stunning, suspenseful and most of all tragic tale that’s gripping until the end.

If We Were Villains is such an utterly engrossing read, that I felt the urge to turn back to the first page and reread it as soon as I was done. It has all the compelling elements, starting with seven theatre kids and a murder. We are fascinated by the dark academia aesthetic: the fancy boarding schools, rich messed-up kids, addiction to art and Shakespeare. We are riveted to the pages, walking back in time to unfold the mystery alongside these characters we grow attached to, despite their flaws. The prose is thick in pretentiousness and Shakespeare language and yet, even as a reader who isn’t educated on that, it pulls you into their obsessive world more. We are riveted to the pages, anchored by the intensity and regret laced in each sentence. There are also underlying themes of how we imitate art and vice versa, the danger of losing touch with reality, the consequences of neglect, and so on. M.L Rio delivers a stunning, suspenseful and most of all tragic tale that’s gripping until the end.

If We Were Villains is such an utterly engrossing read, that I felt the urge to turn back to the first page and reread it as soon as I was done. It has all the compelling elements, starting with seven theatre kids and a murder. We are fascinated by the dark academia aesthetic: the fancy boarding schools, rich messed-up kids, addiction to art and Shakespeare. We are riveted to the pages, walking back in time to unfold the mystery alongside these characters we grow attached to, despite their flaws. The prose is thick in pretentiousness and Shakespeare language and yet, even as a reader who isn’t educated on that, it pulls you into their obsessive world more. We are riveted to the pages, anchored by the intensity and regret laced in each sentence. There are also underlying themes of how we imitate art and vice versa, the danger of losing touch with reality, the consequences of neglect, and so on. M.L Rio delivers a stunning, suspenseful and most of all tragic tale that’s gripping until the end.

If We Were Villains is such an utterly engrossing read, that I felt the urge to turn back to the first page and reread it as soon as I was done. It has all the compelling elements, starting with seven theatre kids and a murder. We are fascinated by the dark academia aesthetic: the fancy boarding schools, rich messed-up kids, addiction to art and Shakespeare. We are riveted to the pages, walking back in time to unfold the mystery alongside these characters we grow attached to, despite their flaws. The prose is thick in pretentiousness and Shakespeare language and yet, even as a reader who isn’t educated on that, it pulls you into their obsessive world more. We are riveted to the pages, anchored by the intensity and regret laced in each sentence. There are also underlying themes of how we imitate art and vice versa, the danger of losing touch with reality, the consequences of neglect, and so on. M.L Rio delivers a stunning, suspenseful and most of all tragic tale that’s gripping until the end.

If We Were Villains is such an utterly engrossing read, that I felt the urge to turn back to the first page and reread it as soon as I was done. It has all the compelling elements, starting with seven theatre kids and a murder. We are fascinated by the dark academia aesthetic: the fancy boarding schools, rich messed-up kids, addiction to art and Shakespeare. We are riveted to the pages, walking back in time to unfold the mystery alongside these characters we grow attached to, despite their flaws. The prose is thick in pretentiousness and Shakespeare language and yet, even as a reader who isn’t educated on that, it pulls you into their obsessive world more. We are riveted to the pages, anchored by the intensity and regret laced in each sentence. There are also underlying themes of how we imitate art and vice versa, the danger of losing touch with reality, the consequences of neglect, and so on. M.L Rio delivers a stunning, suspenseful and most of all tragic tale that’s gripping until the end.

If We Were Villains is such an utterly engrossing read, that I felt the urge to turn back to the first page and reread it as soon as I was done. It has all the compelling elements, starting with seven theatre kids and a murder. We are fascinated by the dark academia aesthetic: the fancy boarding schools, rich messed-up kids, addiction to art and Shakespeare. We are riveted to the pages, walking back in time to unfold the mystery alongside these characters we grow attached to, despite their flaws. The prose is thick in pretentiousness and Shakespeare language and yet, even as a reader who isn’t educated on that, it pulls you into their obsessive world more. We are riveted to the pages, anchored by the intensity and regret laced in each sentence. There are also underlying themes of how we imitate art and vice versa, the danger of losing touch with reality, the consequences of neglect, and so on. M.L Rio delivers a stunning, suspenseful and most of all tragic tale that’s gripping until the end.

What is the book about?

Mystery

Mystery

Mystery

Mystery

Mystery

Mystery

Theatre

Theatre

Theatre

Theatre

Theatre

Theatre

Murder

Murder

Murder

Murder

Murder

Murder

Oliver Marks has just served ten years for the murder of one of his closest friends - a murder he may or may not have committed. On the day he's released, he's greeted by the detective who put him in prison. Detective Colborne is retiring, but before he does, he wants to know what really happened ten years ago. As a young actor studying Shakespeare at an elite arts conservatory, Oliver noticed that his talented classmates seem to play the same roles onstage and off - villain, hero, tyrant, temptress - though Oliver felt doomed to always be a secondary character in someone else's story. But when the teachers change up the casting, a good-natured rivalry turns ugly, and the plays spill dangerously over into life. When tragedy strikes, one of the seven friends is found dead. The rest face their greatest acting challenge yet: convincing the police, and themselves, that they are blameless.

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Support

Gannah

(@handle)

By buying this book here, they will get

Guaranteed by Showcase

Support

Gannah

(@pagesofg)

By buying this book here, they will get

World class shipping guaranteed

Support

Gannah

(@pagesofg)

By buying this book here, they will get

Guaranteed by Showcase

Support

Gannah

(@pagesofg)

By buying this book here, they will get

Guaranteed by Showcase

Support

Gannah

(@pagesofg)

By buying this book here, they will get

World class shipping guaranteed

Support

Gannah

(@pagesofg)

By buying this book here, they will get

World class shipping guaranteed