The Dark Cove Theatre Society

The Dark Cove Theatre Society

Sierra Marilyn Riley

Enjoyment: 2.0Quality: 1.5Characters: 2.0Plot: 1.5
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An aspiring young actor must find her place at a cutthroat arts boarding school in this gothic YA debut for fans of Ace of Spades and If We Were Villains. Violet Costantino knows she is already on thin ice this school year: her scholarship has taken a significant hit due to her panic attack during her final performance in acting class last semester—which simultaneously shattered her dreams of becoming a leading lady. This year, she is determined to keep her head down and just get through unscathed. But the school seems to have other plans for Violet: to her extreme foreboding, she is cast as one of the leads in the annual Halloween play. What’s worse, the beautiful, infuriatingly talented Frankie Lin and Violet’s ex-crush, Hunter Kinsley, are both cast as her love interests. Despite her initial reluctance, Violet is drawn in by the glamor of the Dark Cove Theatre Society, and she cautiously starts believing that maybe she is cut out for this after all. But lurking in the shadows of Violet’s fragile self-confidence is the rumor of the Society curse, which is said to cause one cast member to drop out before opening night every year, mysteriously and without reason. In this captivating YA debut, The Dark Cove Theatre Society illustrates both the intoxicating and insidious nature of success and the price we are often forced to pay for it. Passages of found text—glimpses of the school’s handbook, secret letters, and other peeks into life at the Academy—seamlessly woven into the plot will immerse readers even further into the lush, magnetic world of Dark Cove.

Publication Year: 2025


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  • May 06, 2025
    Enjoyment: 2.0Quality: 1.5Characters: 2.0Plot: 1.5
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    The Dark Cove Theatre Society was... okay, but frankly just okay. I found it kind of messy and all over the place, and like it couldn't quite make up its mind what it wanted to be and consequently felt like it didn't go far enough in any direction. The mixed media element is a fun idea to make the book all the more immersive, but there wasn't quite enough that was particularly relevant, so a lot of it felt like filler. The ending was...convenient. The love triangle, a bit weak. And the footnotes! Oh my goodness, don't even get me started on the footnotes explaining absolutely everything, even things that were obvious from context. I love a footnote, but these were insultingly pointless. I was a theatre kid myself (and a theatre adult, but it's the kid part that's relevant here for this YA book), as well as a lover of all things spooky, gothic, dark academia-ish... and I really wanted to love this book. But the aforementioned flaws just really kept me from getting as hooked as I wanted to be. I do hope this book finds its audience, despite my frustrations with it. Thank you to the publisher for the advance copy in exchange for an honest review.

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