Books for teen readers about SEX: sexual decision-making, sexual preferences, sexual identity, birth control decisions, abstinence, and personal responsibility. Do these books belong in your library? Decide for yourself!
Thursday, June 13, 2024
Gooseberry
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
Camp Quiltbag
Camp Quiltbag by Nicole Melleby and A.J. Sass
Friday, February 9, 2024
How Not to Fall in Love
How Not to Fall in Love by Jacqueine Firkins
Clarion Books, 9780358467144
After years of watching Bridezillas parade through her mom’s wedding shop, Harper is pretty convinced that “love” is something invented to sell stuff. She wants nothing to do with it. This is exactly opposite to the feelings of her neighbor and best friend, Theo, who falls in love on each first date. The two offer to trade tips: Theo will help Harper ace the ACT vocabulary test, and Harper will teach Theo how to avoid falling in love. The vocabulary part goes well. The rest…not so much.
Predictable but sweet boy-next-door romance made MUCH BETTER because the characters–including supporting characters–engage in honest, heartfelt conversations about self-care, birth control, and what they want (or think they want) from relationships. Sweet and tactful sexual situations on the page.
Birth control, friendship, high school, kissing, mental health, neurodivergence, off-page intimacy, on-page sex, parents, rainbow+, Star Trek sex, straight friends
Hockey Girl Loves Drama Boy
Tuesday, September 26, 2023
Unexpecting
Unexpecting by Jen Bailey
Ben Morrison is definitely gay. He’s also 16 years old, a robotics enthusiast…and
about to be a dad.
Wait, what?
Maxie’s pregnancy is the result of an experiment at science
camp, and she just wishes it was all over, but Ben wants to raise the child
himself. With support from his mom, his
new stepdad and his longtime crush, Ben puts together a plan to prepare for
fatherhood…but even before the baby is born, Ben is exhausted and questioning
his choices.
This sweet story has many characters to love: Ben’s best friends, the guy he’s crushed on
for years, his mom and his (adorable) stepdad, and even his new boss. There are a few less-lovable characters
(looking at you, Maxie’s parents) but they get very little time on the
page. The end is predictable but still
adorable.
Recommended for ages 12 and up.
Cussing (mild), diversity, friendship, kissing, high school,
gay friends, straight friends, off-page intimacy, parents, pregnancy, rainbow+,
STEM, neurodivergence.