If We: Were Villains

Unlike novels that merely quote the Bard for flair, Rio weaves the plays into the characters’ very language and psychology. When the characters speak in Macbeth , Julius Caesar , or King Lear during rehearsals or arguments, their lines foreshadow real betrayals, murders, and breakdowns. It’s a masterclass in dramatic irony—you know the source material, so you see the disaster coming long before the characters do.

Rio excels at creating a suffocating, insular world. Dellecher feels like a gothic dream—isolated, rain-soaked, candlelit, and obsessed with beauty and ruin. You can smell the old wood, the stage paint, and the desperation. The dark academia aesthetic isn’t just decoration; it’s the engine of the tragedy. If We Were Villains

Here’s a critical review of If We Were Villains by M.L. Rio, suitable for a blog, Goodreads, or literary publication. Verdict: 4.5/5 stars. For fans of dark academia, Shakespearean tragedy, and morally complex characters. Unlike novels that merely quote the Bard for