I picked this book up probably for the same reason everyone else did—the title, which makes you feel an immediate need to figure out what the collection is about so you don't feel quite so dirty. The cover art is also really intentionally designed, and I can't pretend that I'm not intrigued when a book has a nice cover. Or maybe some picked it up because they had already read one of Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz's other collections, and in that case, I can say I now understand completely.
This collection caught me by surprise. I expected from the first few poems that it would have some humor and be fairly modern, much more prose-like. I did not expect Aptowicz to implement this humor so seamlessly and poignantly with her exploration of universal issues related to the transition into "adulthood" and morality versus necessity. I easily related to the struggles Aptowicz was facing, even though the context she was experiencing them in was completely foreign to me. That almost made it stick more.
I empathized with the questions she faced regarding her own values and morals as she performed work that, at many times, went against them. How do you reconcile the clashing of feminism and an industry that is often overtly misogynistic? How do you maintain your humanity when you work in a field that dehumanizes and objectifies people? But at the same time, how do you turn down an opportunity that will allow you to support yourself while technically doing something you love, even if it's not necessarily in the way you would have chosen?
These questions fascinate me, and I could not put down Hot Teen Slut until I finished the journey with Aptowicz. Though there are definitely some poems in here that made me uncomfortable or that I felt were downright overkill with the sexual focus, I'm unsure whether they aren't necessary to accomplish the overall effect the collection has on its readers. I think the only thing preventing me from giving this five stars is that I felt some more exploration could have been done into how Aptowicz reconciled these two conflicting aspects of her life—her identity and values and her job.
All in all, I'd recommend this collection, and I already have picked up another one by Aptowicz and am looking forward to reading it. She's got a powerful voice and an interesting take on the ways we navigate and survive in our modern world.