Template:Featured article main page: Difference between revisions

From BoyWiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<Br>
<Br>
 
<imagemap>
[[Image:Alexanders-choice-edmund-marlowe-paperback-cover-art.jpg|100px|left]]
Image:Alexanders-choice-edmund-marlowe-paperback-cover-art.jpg|100px|left
default [["Alexander's Choice"]]
desc none
</imagemap>
[[Image:462px-Cscr-featured .png |15px]]'''[["Alexander's Choice"]]''' is a novel set at Eton College in 1983-4 by Edmund Marlowe, an old boy of the school, as his début work. It tells of the love affair of Alexander Aylmer, a new boy at the school aged 13-14 and Damian Cavendish, a new, young English master. Sweet-natured and good-looking, thirteen-year-old aristocrat Alexander Aylmer goes to prestigious Eton College in September 1983 full of optimism. He soon discovers new friends, interesting teachers and the hopes and frustrations that arrive with puberty.
[[Image:462px-Cscr-featured .png |15px]]'''[["Alexander's Choice"]]''' is a novel set at Eton College in 1983-4 by Edmund Marlowe, an old boy of the school, as his début work. It tells of the love affair of Alexander Aylmer, a new boy at the school aged 13-14 and Damian Cavendish, a new, young English master. Sweet-natured and good-looking, thirteen-year-old aristocrat Alexander Aylmer goes to prestigious Eton College in September 1983 full of optimism. He soon discovers new friends, interesting teachers and the hopes and frustrations that arrive with puberty.
   
   

Revision as of 12:16, 30 April 2013


"Alexander's Choice" is a novel set at Eton College in 1983-4 by Edmund Marlowe, an old boy of the school, as his début work. It tells of the love affair of Alexander Aylmer, a new boy at the school aged 13-14 and Damian Cavendish, a new, young English master. Sweet-natured and good-looking, thirteen-year-old aristocrat Alexander Aylmer goes to prestigious Eton College in September 1983 full of optimism. He soon discovers new friends, interesting teachers and the hopes and frustrations that arrive with puberty.