Now this is dark academia!
The honors class at a renowned school of magic only has one task - kill the professor, who is a devil summoned each year only for this purpose - and get your student debt forgiven and become one of the most respected magicians ever.
Content warnings include: murder, graphic descriptions of injury and gore, cannibalism, student debt, sex off-page, manipulation.
That Devil, Ambition follows three friends who are all honors students: Fabian, who carefully crafted his image as a teacher's pet; Credence, a soft-hearted math genius; and Euphemia, who is not as absent minded as she pretends to be.
Along with ten other students, they make up the honors class and theorize as well as attempt to kill their professor after he was summoned.
I found this wildly entertaining, but also almost shocking. The book throws you straight into the first day of the honors class, and straight into the plotting - much of which involved deaths of other students. And while the achieving the death of the professor is the goal, getting there is very difficult, no matter the horrific things done to his body.
I loved the intrigue in the book, all the plots and lore and machinations. There's the plots of the individual students, and their plans to kill the professor, which often involves fucking over their fellow students. There's also stuff going on at the school, and the wider political situation of the fantasy realm. I loved the way the book integrated classism into the academic field. Because, as you can imagine, the fact that surviving the honors class waives your student debt attracts some groups of people more than others.
There are some minor romantic subplot, though this is decidedly NOT a romance. But each of the three protagonists has their own semi-romantic struggles (some struggling more than others) going on. These subplots were nice and varied.
I'm not entirely sure if this is YA or NA - I can see arguments for both. The characters do seem to be above 18.
As usually when I read a book by Linsey Miller, I was very taken by the writing style. It's not always the easiest to parse, and it makes my mind race trying to understand the implications, and sometimes it makes me frustrated because what to they mean by that. But overall I adore the style, it's beautiful and evocative, and it makes me want to reread her books again and again.
Overall I had an amazing experience with this, so if you are craving truly dark academia, and don't mind the content warnings, I can highly recommend this.
I received an ARC and reviewed honestly and voluntarily.