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3 min read

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3.5

· 206 Amazon ratings
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Boys with Sharp Teeth by Jenni Howell Review: A Dark Academia Debut with Style to Spare

Boys with Sharp Teeth is an instant New York Times bestseller and debut YA novel from Jenni Howell, published by Roaring Brook Press on April 8, 2025, in which a girl assumes a false identity to infiltrate her murdered cousin's elite boarding school and uncover the truth — a warped reimagining of The Picture of Dorian Gray that blends dark revenge with twisted desire. Critical coverage found it an intensely dark debut focused more on style than substance, while author blurbs from CG Drews, Jesse Q. Sutanto, and others praise its atmospheric tension and shocking twists. Readers drawn to heady, twisty dark academia will find much to savor here, though those seeking depth to match the dazzle may come away wanting more.

LuvemBooks Verdict

Best for

Readers aged 14–18 who love atmospheric, twist-driven YA and are drawn to the gothic boarding-school worlds of Mackenzi Lee and Maggie Stiefvater — especially those who enjoyed We Were Liars or The Raven Boys and want a revenge thriller with a literary-riff backbone.

Worth it if

Worth it if you prioritise propulsive plotting, lush prose, and a compulsively readable false-identity mystery over deep philosophical engagement with the Dorian Gray source material.

Skip if

Skip it if you need your dark academia to carry sustained thematic and philosophical weight — critical coverage and multiple readers flag that the novel's style outpaces its substance, and the pacing in the middle can lose momentum.

Kirkus Reviews characterises the novel as "an intensely dark debut that's focused on style over substance," a considered critique that acknowledges real artistic ambition while identifying a meaningful imbalance. Reader blogs retrieved offer a split verdict: Pine Reads Review found the writing evocative and the book "a rollercoaster I couldn't put down," while Utopia State of Mind and Me and Ink Blog each noted that pacing issues, underdeveloped themes, and an overly obvious reveal left them disappointed despite high expectations.

An intensely dark debut that's focused on style over substance.

Kirkus Reviews
Sources: Kirkus Reviews, Pine Reads Review, Utopia State of Mind, Me and Ink Blog
3.5from 206 Amazon ratings— reader ratings, not a LuvemBooks score

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In This Review
  • What Works & What Doesn't
  • What the Book Is and What It Does
  • Its Place in the Dark Academia Conversation
  • Strengths the Record Supports
  • Where It Falls Short
  • Who Should Read It

What Works & What Doesn't

What Works
  • An instant New York Times bestseller on debut, signaling wide readership and strong word-of-mouth momentum
  • Structured as a warped reimagining of The Picture of Dorian Gray, giving the dark academia thriller a distinctive literary backbone
  • Praised by multiple authors for atmospheric tension and shocking plot twists that drive compulsive reading
  • The title-page illustration is credited to Frances Wren, adding a distinct visual dimension to the package
  • Targeted squarely at readers aged 14–18, with a premise — revenge, false identity, elite school secrets — that fits the sweet spot of the genre
What Doesn't
  • Critical coverage characterizes it as a debut focused on style over substance, suggesting readers who prioritize character depth or thematic complexity may find it uneven
  • As a debut novel, Howell has no prior bibliography to signal whether her strengths lie more in plot mechanics or in sustained literary ambition
Boys with Sharp Teeth is a debut YA thriller that arrives as an instant New York Times bestseller — a notable achievement from a first-time novelist.
Boys with Sharp Teeth by Jenni Howell front cover
Boys with Sharp Teeth by Jenni Howell front cover

What the Book Is and What It Does

Published by Roaring Brook Press on April 8, 2025, Boys with Sharp Teeth centers on a girl who, desperate to avenge her murdered cousin, assumes a false identity and infiltrates the elite boarding school he attended in order to uncover the truth about his death. The novel is framed explicitly as a warped reimagining of Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, threading that source material's preoccupations — beauty, corruption, and the cost of desire — through a contemporary YA dark academia setting. The book's title-page illustration is credited to Frances Wren, lending the package a visual identity distinct from the prose itself. Macmillan positions it as a book where dark revenge and twisted desire collide with the sinister secrets lurking behind the walls of a privileged institution.
each savage twist compelling you to turn the page long after the lights have gone out.

Its Place in the Dark Academia Conversation

Macmillan's own marketing compares the novel to We Were Liars and The Raven Boys, situating it at the intersection of literary thriller and atmospheric coming-of-age mystery — a shelf that is crowded but perennially hungry for new entries. The Dorian Gray reimagining angle sets it apart from straightforward boarding-school mysteries; it promises not just a whodunit but a meditation on obsession and moral decay. That the book debuted as a New York Times bestseller confirms it landed with an audience, not merely with a marketing campaign. Author Rachel Moore called it "dark academia at its finest," describing it as "a chilling dissection of what it means to be alive."

Strengths the Record Supports

The blurbs assembled around Boys with Sharp Teeth are notably specific in what they praise. Jesse Q. Sutanto, the USA Today bestselling author of Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers, highlights "atmospheric tension and a twisted mystery," while CG Drews, the #1 New York Times-bestselling author of Don't Let The Forest In, describes it as "a taut and darkly lyrical tale of obsession and grief" in which "each savage twist compelling you to turn the page long after the lights have gone out." Amy Goldsmith, author of Those We Drown, echoes the emphasis on grief, calling it a book that "holds a shadowy mirror up to the lengths we might go to for revenge." Across these endorsements, the consistent notes are: lyricism, propulsive plotting, and emotional stakes rooted in loss — not merely genre mechanics. As one passage from the book reads, "I am playing a character, being this girl, and it's unfortunate for everyone."

Where It Falls Short

critical coverage, whose verdict is available from their own coverage, characterizes the novel as "an intensely dark debut that's focused on style over substance." That is a considered critique, not a dismissal — it acknowledges real artistic ambition while identifying a meaningful imbalance. For readers who come to dark academia for its literary density, the rich atmosphere and twist-driven plotting that fuel the book's commercial appeal may feel like they crowd out sustained engagement with character or theme. Whether that trade-off is acceptable will depend entirely on what a given reader is after.

Who Should Read It

Boys with Sharp Teeth is designed for readers aged 14 to 18 and is particularly well-suited to fans of Mackenzi Lee's and Maggie Stiefvater's brand of gothic, aesthetically charged YA — readers who want atmosphere thick enough to taste and a mystery that refuses to stay still. Those who found We Were Liars and The Raven Boys irresistible should find the novel's combination of false-identity thriller and literary-riff structuring immediately appealing. Readers who need their dark academia to carry philosophical weight comparable to the Wilde source material may want to calibrate expectations accordingly, but for the audience the book courts, it arrives with significant momentum and a premise that delivers on the genre's core pleasures.

Sources & Further Reading

The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.

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    us.macmillan.com

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