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Summary
Throughout the years, Todd and Mr. Keating share a copious amount of letters.
Or, the years after Welton.
Series
- Part 3 of tell me we'll never get used to it
Bookmarked by hippoets
02 Apr 2020
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If I really loved him so, why would I run to you? by Ode_et_amo
Fandoms: Dead Poets Society (1989)
06 May 2020
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Summary
Jeff Anderson has a problem. His ex-girlfriend, Chris Noel, is getting married and he along with his family is invited.
He can not turn up alone. Luckily for him, his co-editor Neil Perry is more than willing to act as his date.
What Jeff doesn't know is that Neil is desperately in love with him. The hitch? Jeff is superstraight.
Neil however sees this as an opportunity to get to know Jeff better.
Then he meets Todd Anderson, Jeff's younger brother, and well let's just say he's something else.Bookmarked by hippoets
02 Apr 2020
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Summary
i whisper with my lips close to your ear,
i have loved many women and men, but i love none better than you.
o i have been dilatory and dumb,
i should have made my way straight to you long ago,
i should have blabb'd nothing but you, i should have chanted nothing but you.-walt whitman, to you
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basically just the plot of dead poets society but if neil and todd were a thing
Bookmarked by hippoets
02 Apr 2020
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Summary
Cameron was out that evening, probably lording his mathematical prowess over the other freshmen, so Knox sat by himself in their room. Alone. More than ever, he understood the state of being lonesome - of being other. His chest ached with homesickness. He missed his father’s rumbling laugh, and his Baba’s singing voice when she prayed, and his mother’s sumac chicken, and her stuffed grape leaves, and the way the candlelight from the Menorah made his living room glow golden, late at night.
It was the first day of Chanukah, 1957, and Knox whispered the candle prayers to himself and an empty bedroom, and held the candle in his hand until it was warm enough for him to pretend that it was burning.
Series
- Part 1 of tell me we'll never get used to it
Bookmarked by hippoets
01 Mar 2020
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Summary
All in all, Charlie himself seemed to be the least surprised out of all of them when he heard about what happened.
“Todd Anderson, criminal mastermind,” he would say, grinning like a madman, for years to come. “Beat me to it!”
Todd was not at the wrong place at the wrong time, nor was he drunk, nor did he commit a felony, though he was, indeed, not yet thirty. He was twenty-seven, and he punched a cop in the face.
Series
- Part 2 of tell me we'll never get used to it
Bookmarked by hippoets
19 Feb 2020

