The author of 'This Is a School' is John Schu, a former teacher and librarian who has a knack for capturing the heart and soul of school life. His background in education really shines through in this book, which feels like a love letter to the messy, magical, and sometimes chaotic world of classrooms. You can tell he's someone who's spent years surrounded by kids, because the book radiates warmth and authenticity—it's not just a story, but an experience that resonates with anyone who's ever stepped foot in a school.
What I adore about 'This Is a School' is how it celebrates the little moments that make education so special. Schu doesn't just focus on the academics; he highlights the friendships, the discoveries, and even the occasional frustrations that come with learning. It's a reminder that schools aren't just buildings—they're communities. The illustrations by Veronica Miller Jamison add another layer of vibrancy, making it a joy to flip through. If you've ever wanted to relive that nostalgic school-day feeling, this book is like a cozy hug in literary form.
2025-12-02 04:36:43
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The Teacher's Obsession
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Student x Teacher | Touch her and die | Steamy | Forbidden | Brother's best friend | Age Gap | Enemies to lovers | Badass FMC
He hates her.
She hates him.
For a year already, Mr. Adkins has been cruel to Norali. Her teacher keeps failing her, keeps making comments to her and keeps her late in class. She can't seem to understand why he has such an aversion to her, but she has been equally as mean back.
He is mean, strict and has every woman swooning for him. Except for Norali. The loathing in his eyes, the way his hands turn into fists and his jaw clenches every time he sets eyes on her is enough for her to see right through his good looks. Most of the time.
But he is the only one teaching the subject. There's no escaping him.
And that's exactly how Jace likes it. Norali is his. His to hate, his to desire... His to own. He is in every way a control freak but only wants to have complete control of one person... His student who doesn't listen.
He hates her.
A sexy teacherXstudent book which will have you on the edge of your seat! Fun, forbidden, light-hearted and full of sexual tension.
PAIN AND PLEASURE: The BDSM SERIES
Book 1: Classroom Punishment
Will
No one knows that the professor who commands the entire class is the same woman I control completely. The same classroom where she teaches, becomes the place where I punish her after everyone’s gone.
Iva
I’ve always known about my dark desires, to be controlled, to be punished, but I never imagined one of my own students would be the one to fulfill them. As he tests my limits and takes control, we both find ourselves falling deeper… every single day.
***
“Professor, you know I don’t repeat myself. Open your legs now, or I’ll put you over my lap and spank you. Is that what you want, your students discovering that their strict professor is a submissive?”
Fuck! Why do his warnings always turn me on instead of pissing me off?
This time, I splay my legs, trying not to provoke him further. I quickly glance around. Thankfully, everyone is too busy working on their test to notice anything. My breath catches as his hand slips between my thighs, under the desk.
***
She was never supposed to want him.
He was never supposed to touch her.
Behind closed doors, the woman who controls the classroom becomes the one who surrenders.
The student who obeys the rules becomes the one who makes them.
But love is far more dangerous than desire.
If they are discovered, she will lose her career.
If they walk away, they will lose each other.
Harper Scott’s life has been nothing but chaos disguised as fate.
Every time her mother remarries, someone dies… and Harper is forced to start over in a new town, moving to new schools and struggling to fit in.
But she has one goal this year: survive senior year and secure her future at Harvard.
This time, when she loses her third stepfather, she refuses to lose everything she has built in three years again.
Then her mother leaves her with one option: she stays behind with an old friend.
Her only job? Tutor the friend’s ‘dullard son’ so he passes his SATs.
Harper readily agrees, only to discover the son is none other than Jace Carter.
The nation’s hockey god and school royalty.
More importantly, her number one enemy at school and personal nightmare.
At school, they are enemies, but at home, they are teacher and student.
But when his toxic ex sets her sights on destroying Harper and making her a target, will Jace step up to help her or not?
Harper realizes surviving him might be harder than surviving her own life.
Lydia Martins, the smart kid at school, is the constant target of bullies like Emily, the wealthy businessman's daughter, who torments Lydia for getting perfect grades.
After Lydia aces another test, Emily and her friends confront Lydia in the bathroom, calling her "Teacher's Pet" and accusing her of only succeeding because of the handsome, young Mr. Derek—the new English teacher. The girls tease and bully Lydia, claiming she's sleeping with Mr. Derek for good grades, before dumping a bucket of water over her head.
Humiliated, Lydia soon finds photos from the incident circulating online with vile captions calling her a ‘Slut’ and the ‘Teacher’s Pet’.
Enraged, she hatches a plan not to get back at her bullying classmates but to target Mr. Derek instead.
She decides that if she can get him fired, the torment over her grades might finally stop.
I had just gotten home when a parent in my son’s class group chat erupted:
[Ms. Zinn, what kind of place are you running? Do you let just any random stray off the street become a teacher?]
[My daughter came home, grabbed two forks, and tried to jump off the balcony. She said it was Miss Never who told her to!]
The homeroom teacher panicked and denied it at once, insisting there was no such person as Miss Never at the kindergarten.
She even posted the official teaching schedule in the chat to prove it.
On the security footage, there was not a single trace of this so-called Miss Never.
However, later, my son whispered to me in secret,
“Mom, Miss Never is an old lady with a cat’s face.”
“She says only kids can see her.”
THE LIE I WAS FORCED TO LIVE AT SILVERSTONE ACADEMY
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I have spent twenty-five years being the son my father never had.
I have never worn a dress, never been called a daughter, and never once been allowed to simply be myself. Things only got tougher when I abandoned my own wedding. I got sentenced as a boarder at Silverstone Academy, surrounded by future rulers who sleep, train, and live beside me. One wrong move is all it takes for everything to fall apart.
I can only survive Silverstone if I can keep up the lies.
But secrets are like wounds, they do not stay buried forever.
Man, I totally get the struggle of hunting down manga online—especially lesser-known gems like 'This Is a School.' I stumbled across it a while back while deep-diving into slice-of-life titles. Your best bet is to check out aggregate sites like MangaDex or Bato.to; they often host fan scans. Just be ready for inconsistent uploads since it’s niche.
If you’re okay with unofficial translations, some scanlation groups might’ve picked it up—try searching their Discord servers or forums. But honestly? If you love the series, consider supporting the creator by buying the official release when you can. It’s one of those heartfelt stories that deserves the love.
'This Is a School' is one of those stories that sneaks up on you with its simplicity before hitting you right in the feels. It's a coming-of-age manga set in a rural Japanese school, following a group of students who are all dealing with their own personal struggles—family issues, self-doubt, the pressure of exams, you name it. The protagonist, a transfer student named Shizuku, arrives with a closed-off attitude, but slowly opens up thanks to her classmates' persistence. The plot isn't about grand adventures; it's those small, everyday moments—like sharing lunch or studying together—that build into something meaningful. There's this one scene where they fix up their crumbling school garden, and it's just... wholesome. The series really nails how school life can be messy, bittersweet, and beautiful all at once.
What I love most is how it avoids melodrama. Even when heavy topics come up—like poverty or bullying—it handles them with a quiet realism that makes the characters' growth feel earned. The ending isn't some big climax; it's just the kids graduating, moving on, but you’re left with this warm ache, like you’ve lived through it with them.