Seventeen-year-old schoolboy Kim is an idle drifter at one of Britain’s most extraordinary institutions, Eton College – crammed with over a thousand boys and not a girl in sight. His head is full of the Falklands War and a possible army career, until the day he hears his new piano teacher, the beautiful but pained India, playing Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier. Kim’s life is destined never to be the same again. An intensely passionate affair develops and he wallows in the wild and unaccustomed thrill of first love.
Twenty-five years on, Kim recalls that heady summer and how their fledgling relationship was so brutally snuffed out – finished off by his enemies, by the constraints of Eton, and by his own withering jealousy. The Well-Tempered Clavier is the bittersweet story of a life-changing love.
The story behind it:
The Well-Tempered Clavier is Eton’s first love story, and is an evocative, tempestuous,
passionate novel with classical tragic undertones. It is named after Bach’s famous collection, the music that brings the characters together, and each chapter is named after a relevant prelude.
Author William Coles went to Eton himself and he too, like his protagonist Kim, plays the piano. William has put together a wonderful 2-minute video describing the book and the passion within it, and also answering that all-important question, is it autobiographical?
Click here to view the video now and also visit William Coles' blog at www.clavierbook.blogspot.com
Why Legend Press chose to publish it:
This novel is a beautifully-told and fiercely passionate love-story that cannot help but leave every reader, male or female, tingling with emotion.
The setting of Eton, along with description of unique life and custom at the school, is of continued fascination to the outside world and was definitely one of the things that drew us to the book. Its imposing environment adds great power to the story. Adding even further depth is the setting at the time of the Falklands War, a topic then on everyone’s minds and lips. With the 25th anniversary this year and the related national coverage this adds a further topical angle to the novel.