For the Love of Dark Academia

Why a Sub-genre about Privilege has such a Cult Minority Following

Dark Academia isn’t new, in fact, it’s centuries old. The genre is predicated on a few things, it involves a school setting (usually college or private in nature), a group of friends, and extremely dark themes such as murder, violence, deceit, suicide, etc… Many Greek tragedies are considered Dark Academia simply because they usually take place in a scholarly setting and examine deep, philosophical questions about nature, humankind, and more. Historically, these themes have only been examined, for the most part, by white males, particularly of European or Anglo-Saxon descent. So why, then, does this genre currently have such a cult following of minorities?

Here are my thoughts on the matter as a queer woman:

Evil isn’t personified but still recognizable

In a lot of other genres a finger can be pointed directly at the thing or person who is evil. It’s a dark force of nature or a malicious deity or a wizard bent on destruction. In Dark Academia, often times, there is no point blank evil force, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t evil. In Dark Academia, evil resides in the people and things we recognize all too clearly, the young college boys who harass and demean women but never face consequences for it, the institution that turns a blind eye to evil acts because it benefits from them. Dark Academia gives us the opportunity to explore those lives we often love to hate. The rich, the elite, the tone deaf, the only difference is, most of the time the evil characters are bookended by characters we HOPE exist in these places, working against the system they were born into. Darlington from Ninth House is a perfect example of this.

Characters face consequences for their actions outside of the law

While the evil is identifiable that doesn’t mean Dark Academia is black and white. Often times characters will act against other characters who have done evil or malicious things in a way that is also evil or malicious, taking the, somewhat, twisted, role of a vigilante. I find this particular plot point so interesting to read because, as minorities, we tend to know that there isn’t much the law will do to help us. Rape kits sit untested in evidence rooms for decades, reports of harassment go undocumented, the list goes on and on. Dark Academia gives us a place to see those privileged, maligned characters get their “just desserts”, even if the revenge is just as morally repugnant. An example of this would be The Secret History by Donna Tartt and also Alex Stern’s revenge blackmail of a college frat boy who raped her friend in Ninth House.

Heavily implied homoerotic subtext

One of the thematic elements that you can find in almost all Dark Academia is homoerotic subtext. Historically there aren’t usually “out” gay characters or gay relationships, but because MOST of the characters tend to be men, there is a lot of subtext and interpretation that could be construed as homosexual in nature. In recent decades, however, that has started to change and writers have begun to include actual LGBTQ+ characters, for instance Ronan and Adam in The Raven Cycle series. But older examples like The Picture of Dorian Gray and Dead Poets Society just heavily imply it.

It’s fun to hate characters sometimes

I don’t always need to like a character and support all their decisions for me to recognize that they are a good (ie well written) character. Sometimes it’s fun to hate characters and watch their actions like an on-going trainwreck. I know this a matter of preference but I think it also really lends itself to why Dark Academia has such a cult following. The characters inspire such strong emotion, it’s hard not to want to talk about it with other people and discuss what happened. If there’s one criticism I see from people who don’t like Dark Academia it’s that none of the characters are likable and I have to say, I just don’t understand that. A character doesn’t have to be likable for me to like them as a character, in fact, them being wholly unlikable usually makes it more exciting.

Dark Academia Recommendations

Interested in trying out the genre? I have a few books listed below that I have personally read that I’ve ranked from “easiest” to “hardest” in terms of how difficult they can be to get into if you’re new to the genre. This is by no means an exhaustive list as it only includes books I’ve read, but I highly recommend all of these.

  1. The Raven Boys – Maggie Stiefvater
  2. Vicious – V.E. Schwab
  3. A Great and Terrible Beauty – Libba Bray
  4. Ninth House – Leigh Bardugo
  5. Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro
  6. Hamlet – William Shakespeare
  7. The Secret History – Donna Tartt
  8. The Picture of Dorian Gray – Oscar Wilde
  9. Frankenstein – Mary Shelley

8 Books I’m Thankful For This Year

Thanksgiving is later this week and I cannot tell you how much I’m looking forward to it. Not only do I need the mental break of a long weekend, I’m looking forward to some much needed family time and, of course, some delicious food.

In the spirit of thankfulness, I wanted to highlight eight books, plays, or graphic novels that I’m thankful for this year, whether because they have significance in my life or I just really enjoyed them recently. I apologize up front that I AM, in fact, going to rave about The Starless Sea again at some point. Sorry…but not really.

Let me know what books you’re thankful for this holiday season in the comments!


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Carry On – Rainbow Rowell

In many ways I owe Rainbow Rowell a lot. Carry On was one of the Young Adult books that really got me back into reading after I had been out of college for a few years. Wayward Son was also SO bad it motivated me to finally make a GoodReads account and leave my first review. Seriously though, Carry On is worthy of all the praise it receives. The LGBTQ+ characters combined with the magical setting and plot made me so damn excited. Unfortunately, Wayward Son disappointed me this year. I hope Simon and Baz both find their spines in the next book.


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Snotgirl – Bryan Lee O’Malley, Leslie Hung

This one made the list purely because of how much I enjoy this graphic novel series. It’s good, extremely colorful fun that still has a nice mix of murder, because, you know, everything needs just a little bit of murder to make it interesting. It’s also another book that has slight LGBTQ+ themes. If you’re starting to see a trend, yeah, welcome to my blog, I like queer fiction. Seriously though, if you haven’t given Snotgirl a try, I definitely suggest it. It’s great for people who love graphic novels and also people looking for some “beginner” graphic novels. 


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The Starless Sea – Erin Morgenstern

Don’t mind me, I’m just going to rant about The Starless Sea for a little bit more. It’s extremely rare that a book hit me as hard as this one did. It’s not often I read a whole half of a book until all hours of the night on a work night just to finish it. It’s even less often that I spend the next few minutes SOBBING LIKE A BABY after I finish said book. I wish more writers were willing to take a chance on the whimsical and the nonsensical like Erin Morgernstern is. Her writing is masterful and…would you look at that, this book is also LGBTQ+. 


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The Adventure Zone Vol 1 – Griffin, Travis, Justin & Clint McElroy, Carey Pietsch

The Adventure Zone meant so much to me as a podcast. I listened to it going to and from work at a job that I very much hated with a super long commute that I also hated and binging the back log of The Adventure Zone: Balance until I caught up just in time for the final chapter and the finale was really what kept me going. I own….uh….four volumes of the first graphic novel, Here There be Gerblins, because I pre-ordered one through First Second, the publisher, when it went live, then pre-ordered a second one from Barnes & Noble when they announced a B&N exclusive cover, and then got one with my ticket to see them live in NY when the first volume launched…oh and my partner got one, so I’m counting that too. So, yeah, just mildly obsessed. I also have it tattooed to my body. 


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Harry Potter & the Prisoner of Azkaban – J.K. Rowling

I added the third Harry Potter book to this post because Prisoner of Azkaban was the first book I kind of read on my own. Sorcerer’s Stone and Chamber of Secrets were read to me by my mom at bedtime but by the time the third one came out, I was ready to try and read it on my own. I remember so vividly being utterly SCANDALIZED when Aunt Marge said the word “bitch” in reference to a female dog. Seven year old me was shook. I’m like 98% sure this is the first one I read by myself, but if I’m wrong mom, just text me. 


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It – Stephen King

For such an avid horror fan I really haven’t read much Stephen King. I read the first and second book of The Dark Tower series last year but I knew if I read them all in a row it would burn me out of the series. I haven’t returned to it, simply because there’s always something else I want to read more. So, when I picked up the 1,000+ page brick that is It, I honestly didn’t know if I would finish it, but I blew through it. Similar to The Starless Sea, but so very very very different in subject matter, King is never afraid to spend paragraphs talking about things that don’t make sense. I spend so much time in life trying to make sense of everything, I find it’s almost relaxing to suspend reality and just accept that not everything needs an explanation when I’m reading, I think that’s why I love books like It. 


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The Raven King – Maggie Stiefvater

Similar to Carry On, The Raven Cycle series is another thing that got me back into YA and back into reading after graduating college. I settled on highlighting The Raven King specifically because…surprise, it’s ALSO LGBTQ+, though my partner, Mandy, will tell you that The Dream Thieves is also very gay. I think if there was any writer I would pinpoint as being the inspiration for my own writing, it would be Maggie Stiefvater. Not only is her writing hysterical at times, it’s also lyrical and easy to read. You brain never has to start and stop and can instead just get lost in the amazing world and characters that Maggie has created. 


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A Midsummer Night’s Dream – William Shakespeare

I am actually a HUGE Shakespeare fan, or I guess rather I’m a fan of classic literature and plays and a lot of it is Shakespeare. A Midsummer Night’s Dream is, hands down, my favorite. It’s only with writing this down right now that I’m realizing it’s also because of my love of whimsical and magical shit that doesn’t make sense. Also, fun fact, I played Quince in my elementary school’s Shakespeare Club production of this play. I feel like I won an award for it, but maybe I’m making that entirely up. My goal for 2020 is to get something from this play tattooed to my body. 

I guess if you’re going to take anything away from this list it should be, the more gay something is the more I’ll love it and the less sense it makes the quicker I’ll devour it. I feel like nonsensical and queer is a pretty good combination to live by. 

 

Overcoming 4-Star Syndrome

Why I give every book I read a four star review and why I need to stop

The time has come. I’ve finished the book I’ve been reading for the past few days and now I need to mark it down and give it my final review. I open up my GoodReads account to say that I’ve completed it and the notification pops up asking how I would rate the book between one and five stars. I take a second to reflect on the book, how I felt about it, how I think the characters and the story progressed, and then I select the four star option. I do this without fail almost every time I finish a book and I need to STOP!

I feel like this might be a pretty common occurrence amongst readers and I think I’ve cracked why. The grading system.

I grew up in America so this will all be based on the American grading system, but unless your country’s grading system is pass/fail I’m pretty positive this will still apply.

When I think about reviewing books I have subconsciously superimposed the review rating onto the grading system I grew up with, so:

  • ★★★★★ = A
  • ★★★★ = B
  • ★★★ = C
  • ★★ = D
  • ★ = F

At face value it seems like it should be accurate but it’s not and let me tell you why!

1) Books Aren’t Grades

Reading and finishing a book is in no way comparable to a grade on a test. Most people, unless it’s your job or you’re writing a dissertation, aren’t studying each book they read before they review it. They’re reading the book as they go about their days and then giving it a review based on how much they enjoyed it, or didn’t. Any plot or thematic or character analysis in a review is still only going to come from someone who read a book leisurely one time.

Not to mention there is SO much more encompassed in one book than there is in one grade. To be honest, most things have more meaning than grades, but we’ll get to that later.

2) Reviews Are Subjective

The reason places like GoodReads or Amazon or Barnes & Noble collect and display an average rate based on multiple reviews is because literally no two people are alike and no two people have the EXACT same feelings about a book. One person could rate a book one star and another person could rate the same book five stars. Reviews are entirely subjective and purely based upon the reader’s opinion. Whereas, with most tests, there is a clear right answer. There’s no reason to think that a one star review is comparable to an F when the one star review is based on one person’s preferences and the F is based on “the correct answer was 22 and you said 7”.

3) Grades Were Never Indicative of Your Self-Worth

I know this is a hard one to understand, especially because I’m assuming a lot of you were fellow overachievers in high school who felt like a B- was one step too close to the first circle of Hell. But…grades really meant nothing about you as a person nor were they ever truly reflective of your skill and intellect. I hesitate to give a book a three star review because in my head that’s a C and that’s pretty much almost failing, but a book can’t FAIL. A book can be not the right book for you, and that’s fine, but it’s going to be perfect for someone else. I stop myself from giving a book a three star review because if I got a C on a test I would feel like I had failed. I also stop myself from giving a book a five star review because that would be an A and, let’s be honest, does it really warrant an A? It had its flaws, it didn’t blow my socks off, it’s not the next literary masterpiece. Stop! Those arbitrary letter grades meant nothing and they still mean nothing, stop allowing them to dictate how you feel about something you enjoy doing.

So, with this in mind, below is the scale I’m now going to use to rate books. Hopefully, this will finally cure me of my four star syndrome.

  • ★★★★★ = I loved this and would recommend it anyone
  • ★★★★ = I loved this and would recommend it to the right person
  • ★★★ = I liked this and would consider recommending it
  • ★★ = I didn’t enjoy one or a few aspects of the book
  • ★ = I didn’t enjoy the book

So, there you have it. I really do hope this helps and I’m positive I will be referring back to this as I review books to remind myself how the scale should ACTUALLY work and then rate accordingly. Now I just have to hope my next few reviews aren’t all four stars!