Within 24 hours of getting this in the mail, I sat down and read it in one sitting. SEX EDUCATED fills a vital gap in the conversations many Mormon girls lack when it comes to their bodies. Bonnie Young, a therapist, writes this book as letters to her younger self—an approach that infuses the book with a tender honesty, warmth, humor, and hard-won wisdom. As a reader, I truly FELT the struggles and vulnerability this narrator experienced. But also, a calming clarity from her voice on the other side of the struggles—from her training as a therapist and in the eight years it took her to thoughtfully consider and write this book.
But what Young does exceptionally well is not just give us a warm introduction to the topic—especially given how fraught, squeamish, and (sadly) shame-filled those conversations can be in this context—she is explicit. This is not a wishy-washy, fluffy, “we’ll-use-metaphors-because-we-feel-embarrassed” book. She is direct and kind because she cares. Speaking personally, I can usually sense when I am reading if the book in my hand is one that the author needed to write—a deep-dive of the soul because they truly have something they wanted to say, something they wanted to change. SEX EDUCATED definitely leaves me with that feeling.
I wish I had something like this book when I was growing up. The lessons in here about consent, relationship to food, modesty, objectification, healthy boundaries, anatomy, boys/men being responsible for their own thoughts, and a broader definition of the word “sex” are urgent conversations to have. Young has paved the way forward for many more discussions (and she even includes a list of further readings!). I’m so glad I read this book and highly recommend it for young LDS women navigating their early sexuality with all the questions, whiplash messages, and desire for truly connective sex with their partners.