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Wexton School: Book One: Yuri

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"An extrovert Harry Potter goes to a Military School in a Fantasy World"

What would you do if you knew you would have to go to an almost military school in another world?

The same world that sent you to jail some years earlier.

Lyon knew that this day would come. Every young Gaëth must serve in Wexton School because they are the only ones that can control the aura. If the aura is not controlled, Maëy and Earth can end.

He wasn't expecting to find many fun things there.
They learn to fight, to defeat uncontrolled creatures, called the sijits, and even to mount dragons and hyenas. They fly through the skies because Maëy is made of floating islands, and they have evil teachers, who Lyon love to pick on.

Lyon even made a best-friend there. Something he had never had before, thanks to his time in jail, who made him always be the weird kid, the bullied kid. But not now. Now, everything is different in Wexton School. He has friends and a lot of fun.

Until the day the mean kid, the biggest bully in school, Attila, decided that he would make them all become his slaves. They would have to do missions for him and give him all their aura.

Lyon decided he wouldn't accept it. His anger issues made him do things he wouldn't be proud of later.

After a big punishment together, Attila invites Lyon to join him and his gang. Ly would never accept it. Attila is mean, he beats kids up, he steals their auras and enslaves them.

However, he faces a dead end.

His choice will make his best friend, Yuri, really angry.

What will he do? Will he join the biggest bully in school and betrays his friends? Or will he face Attila and accept the consequences?

He also does the thing that everybody warns him repeatedly not do: he gets really close to a sijit.
This is extremely forbidden.
The consequences will be severe.

This a thrilling adventure of an all-boys boarding school in a fantasy world. They go on adventures, missions, and learn to fight. They explore and have a lot of fun. However, it is also filled with drama, bullies, peer pressure, and all the challenges that teenagers have to face while growing up. All of this amid a totalitarian Government. Maëy is basically a dictatorship that sends kids to jail without a lot of reason to. Lyon has to accept what he can't change, like us all in real life.

What you'll find in this adventure:

- Teenager boys growing up;
- Real friendships;
- Facing the challenges of a new life;
- A fantasy magic boarding school;
- A lot of fights.
- Bullies, peer pressure;
- Dictatorship governments;
- Fantasy, dragons, flying island, hyenas, magic spheres of aura.

What WON'T you find:

- Cliché romance;
- Poorly developed bullies that only exist to make the main character's life miserable;
- Random villains without motivations;
- The magic that doesn't make sense;

If you love fantasy schools books but are tired of poorly written books who only try to copy Harry Potter, since you just want a good school in magic but which is also original;

If you love school books, especially those who address school and society and involves school drama; if you're looking for a good boarding school romance, boarding school fiction, and boarding school mystery;

If you love books about government systems, government conspiracy fiction, government experiment or a good government thriller, which is also a government kids book;

If you want good bullying books

384 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 25, 2019

3 people are currently reading
3 people want to read

About the author

Isadora Felix

29 books3 followers

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Author 3 books5 followers
September 3, 2020
The one thing that I value the most in a book is the ability to trust the author. Trust that they will not sacrifice the integrity of the characters for the sake of plot twists no one could have seen coming. Trust that they will work with the reader rather than seek to manipulate them for financial gain. Trust, in short, that they value my readership enough to not waste my time. Very few authors lately have managed to gain my complete trust, trust to a point where even if something looks like a plothole I will keep reading, assuming, believing, that they have a plan with it and know what they are doing. Isadora Felix made me trust her, and she never broke that trust. There is no greater compliment I can give an author.
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