Camp Quiltbag by Nicole Melleby and A.J. Sass
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!
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
Camp Quiltbag
Friday, February 9, 2024
Plan A
Plan A by Deb Caletti
Labyrinth Road, 9780593485545
16-year old Ivy is strong, independent, opinionated…and pregnant. She has plans and hopes and dreams for her future, and that future does not involve a child originating from sexual assault.
Unfortunately for Ivy, she lives in contemporary Texas, which has some of the most restrictive women’s health laws in the country. Ivy doesn’t realize that she is pregnant until she has passed the 6-week mark, after which an abortion is illegal in her home state. Fortunately for Ivy, she is not alone: her mother, grandmother, and a host of other women (and men) are willing to prioritize her choices, and so begins what Ivy and her adorable boyfriend Lorenzo call their “abortion road trip love story.”
This book is serious and funny, timeless and timely. It will absolutely be banned and challenged, and should absolutely be available for any reader who wants it–because these choices are important, and stories about these choices are possibly even more important. Highly recommended for ages 14 to adult.
Abortion, birth control, bullying, cussing, diversity, friendship, high school, kissing, parents, pregnancy, rainbow+, religion, sexual assault (on-page), Star Trek sex
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
The Winter of the Witch
Monday, November 26, 2018
Dread Nation
Dread Nation by Justina Ireland
Saturday, January 27, 2018
The Girl in the Tower
Sequel to The Bear and the Nightingale, this story takes up where the first book ended: Vasya has left her family and her village. Together, she and her marvelous horse (with some help from Morozko, the frost demon) journey towards Moscow, and (of course) things go terribly wrong along the way.
Familiarity with Russian folklore will definitely aid in understanding and enjoying this dense, dark tale. Vasilisa and Morozko figure in many traditional stories, as do...oh, but that would be a spoiler.
If you know the stories, you may recognize characters along the way; otherwise, you will be as surprised as Vasya herself when true identities are revealed.
Monday, August 21, 2017
The Black Witch
Monday, September 26, 2016
The Serpent King
The Serpent King by Jeff Zentner
Dill has two friends and two problems.
Dill's friends are Travis and Lydia. Travis is big, shy, kind, and so obsessed with his favorite sword-and-sorcery book that he can mostly ignore his lousy home life. Lydia is cute, smart, rich, upwardly mobile, and aimed OUT of the dinky backwater Tennessee town (named for a founding member of the KKK, wahoo!) where they all live.
Dill's problems are his name and his future. His name is Dillard Early, Jr, and he was named for his father, Dillard Early, Sr., (known locally as the Pervert Preacher), and for his papaw, (known locally as the Serpent King). His future looks a lot like his present day, and that's not good.
Then something happens to make Dill's life unbearable. The reader knows that something is going to change. But...what?
If you think you know what will happen to the preacher's kid from "one of those crazy snake churches," you are probably wrong. The journey is not predictable, and yet, it all makes sense. Extra stars for religious extremists who are deeper than the paper on which they are written, and for religious questioning without obvious answers.
You may see this book compared to the works of John Green, and while I understand the comparison, I also don't think this reads like a JG book. It has some excellent (and some dreadful) parent characters, it has super-tough situations, there is kissing on the page. But JG rarely touches religion, and I don't know if he could handle (pun intended) a snake church.
And if there's sex, I missed it. It might have happened off-page. In fact, I kind of hope it did.
Rivoting read; recommended for readers ages 12 to adult, and it definitely needs to be a movie!
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Walk on Earth a Stranger
Walk on Earth a Stranger by Rae Carson
For her own safety, and to elude capture by the wicked uncle she is sure murdered her parents back at their little homestead cabin in Georgia, Leah disguises herself as a boy and flees West, to California and the gold recently discovered there.
While travelling, Lee must not only conceal her true identity, but also her most dire secret: she can sense the presence of gold. Small nuggets, deeply buried veins, gold buttons or rings, and even gold dust caught under a fingernail call to Lee like a sweet song. She knows that some would call this talent "witchcraft." She also knows that in California, her power might make her very, very rich.
But first, she has to get there.
With rich, round characters and plenty of fascinating little historical details, Lee's engrossing journey from Georgia to California kept me turning pages.
Some blood, some violence, and some cussing but no sex...so why is this book presented on the SEX IN THE LIBRARY blog?
I'm so happy you've asked!
The author includes a small group of men in the wagon train group headed west. Without much detail provided, it is clear to the astute reader (and made more clear by the author's note at the end of the story) that these are, in fact, gay men. It is not a huge plot point, and that's the beauty of it: at last, teen literature has matured to the point where a character's sexual preferences are no longer the Central Issue of a book. In fact, the young men's status as "confirmed bachelors" is less of a conflict point than the status of another character who is Presbyterian instead of Methodist. These details are important, but they are not The Problem.
The story clearly leads to a sequel, but stands alone with a satisfying point of pause while we wait, patiently (or not) for the next volume.
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Eden West
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Station Eleven
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
On an ordinary, snowy Toronto night, 8-year-old Kirsten Raymonde is onstage watching a famous actor playing King Lear die of a heart attack.
Three weeks later, almost everyone else present in the theatre that night is dead of a virulent mutant Swine Flu.
Four weeks later, almost everyone else in the world is dead of the virus.
Fifteen years later, the Earth is only sparsely populated by survivors of the virus and the social collapse that followed.
Kirsten is one of the survivors. Twenty years after the flu epidemic, Kirsten is a member of the Traveling Symphony, a ragtag group of musicians and actors on a never-ending tour of the surviving settlements, performing Bach, Beethoven, and Shakespeare because, as the motto written on the first caravan says, "Survival is insufficient" (a quote borrowed from "Star Trek: Voyager)
This is not a gentle apocalypse. Some survivors have banded together in peaceful villages. Others are drawn to Doomsday cults. Some cling desperately to the glorious history of humanity, telling whispered tales of flying machines, air conditioning, and antibiotics. Others eschew the past, wanting to spare their children the ugliness of the now-gone world.
The tale bounces back and forth along the timeline, from pre-apocalypse to various points in the collapse, which might be confusing but isn't. Throughout the novel, the lasting power of art and literature lend small amounts of grace and strength to the characters. From Sartre's "Hell is other people" to Miranda's "Brave new world, that has such people in’t," this novel will deeply affect the way readers view their technology-enhanced world...and each other.
Although written and marketed as a book for adults, this story is highly recommended for readers ages 14 to adult. Sexual situations are tactfully off-stage, violence is on-stage but not gory.
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Sweet Reckoning
Sweet Reckoning by Wendy Higgins
This is the third and final book in the Sweet Evil trilogy. Where Book 2 was simply a bridge book, the final book brings all the suspense and excitement, and hot bodies to a very satisfying conclusion.
Anna Whitt, half angel / half demon, is still working with her father, Belial, demon and duke of Substance Abuse, to rid the world of demons. Anna was promised through a prophecy that if the dukes and their children, the nephilim, would fight to free the world of demons, they would not be thrust into the abyss. How to get the demon world to work with her is the trick.
Anna has been working with the aid of several Nephilim and a (very)few of the dukes since Book 1. The time has come to make a stand. Anna has not seen Kaiden since he went back to work for his father, Pharzuph, the Duke of Lust. Their love and partnership rekindled, they must now pull the fighters together for one last stand- at the meeting of all demons and nephilim.
The affair between Anna and Kaiden is still smoking hot. Kaiden is still fighting the order from his father to deflower Anna. Getting around that order is both cheesy and intriguing. The action is non-stop, with surprises along the way. The battle ends almost as it starts, but along the way, we see growth in each of the supporting cast, along with some new neph.
While this has always been good vs evil with Biblical mythology, the absolute religious tendencies of the author have been held in the distance. In this last book, they are certainly forefront. Still, we knew that when the series started. The story stands on its own merit.
While the first two books were pretty chaste, with Kaiden pulling the abstinence stops, this one forges ahead. Be ready.
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Wild Things : acts of mischief in children's literature
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Of Beast and Beauty
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Raven Boys
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Viva Jacquelina!
Viva Jacquelina! by L.A. Meyer
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
There Is No Dog
Putnam 2011
When philosophers have theorized about God, whether man was created in God’s image or what that entity could look like, they never saw God as a horny teenager--a teen who loves junk food and is constantly pouting.
Yet, this is Bob, who created the heavens and the earth and all its species. And then forgets it, allowing wars and natural disasters just through a normal teen’s thoughtlessness. And who has constantly fallen “in love.” Some of the love interests, mentioned in passing, were taken from the Greek gods and therefore recognizable.
Now meet Lucy, a zoo worker who Bob has newly discovered. A no-nonsense kind of girl who loves her job, Lucy has little time for Bob when she meets him, and although drawn to him in a way she can’t understand, initially rejects him. As Bob is upset, so are the natural forces on earth, and we experience torrential rains, floods, mixed with inexplicable days of gorgeous sun when Bob is more hopeful.
Since the job of being God was won in a poker game, Bob now needs an assistant. Mr. B. does all the mundane tasks of “the job,” such as answering prayers and taking care of Bob, whom he sees as “devoid of discipline, compassion and emotional depth. Foresight…the boy was obviously thick as a divot, and if there hadn’t been a push from someone with a bit of influence, he’d still be out in the middle of the great galactic nothingness sleeping, probably, or picking his nose.”
That pretty much sums up all the characters in the novel. Even Mr. B’s constant complaining becomes tiresome. When Estelle, a goddess, begins planning to change things, the plan is fuzzy and does not draw our attention. Funny, even laugh out loud funny at times, at times very irreverent, but ultimately forgettable.
We will not “stay up all night worrying about the existence of dog.”