Set in Boston (and also involving Harvard University and artistically talented main protagonist Robin Murphy as a high school student taking a university level drawing course, wonderfully and delightfully discovering life drawing, the beauty of the human body au naturel, without clothing and realising that even though at his school Robin is routinely and all generally denigrated and ridiculed, everyone accepts and even appreciates him at Harvard), Sonya Somes' 2007 novel in verse What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know (the sequel to her 2001 What My Mother Doesn't Know, which I have actually and unfortunately not yet read but hope to remedy as son as possible) Somes delivers an easy reading and powerfully, delightfully engaging young adult novel in verse about teenage love (about love in general). And indeed, and in my opinion, having Sonya Somes write What my Girlfriend Doesn't Know from a male perspective totally and delightfully textually works for me, as I most certainly do not find fourteen year old Robin Murphy's first person narration for What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know in any way artificial, but relatable, intriguing, tugging at me emotionally and also never ever feeling awkward, stagnant or proceeding in a forced manner, and not to mention that even though Robin is of course male, I (as a female reader) actually do feel considerably closer to him emotionally and spiritually in What My Girlfriend Doesn't Known than I in any way manage to accomplish with his girlfriend (with Sophie Stein), and that frankly, Robin's experiences at school (and this includes concerning questions love) definitely rather tend to mirror my own.
And while I was (just like Robin does himself) at the beginning of What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know totally worrying that he would as soon as the school year starts be unceremoniously dumped by his popular (and also first) girlfriend, since the main protagonist of What My Mother Doesn't Know, since Sophie Stein is being totally ostracised all round because she is with Robin Murphy supposedly dating the school looser and scapegoat, thankfully, wonderfully (and even if perhaps also a bit of textual wishful thinking) Sophie sticks with Robin and together they manage to rise above the universal derision by laughing both at themselves and also at everyone else to make their budding relationship mostly work, something that in particular my inner teenager really appreciates regarding What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know (since I had something rather similar happen to my during high school but with a very much different outcome, with the popular boy in fact dumping me as soon as the you know what hit the proverbial fan so to speak and rumours and innuendo started flying, so that yes, Sophie not letting Robin go certainly hits a sweet spot for me and makes much of What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know into a bit of fantastical and delightful wish fulfillment for me and even more so for myself as a teenager).
But although Robin and Sophie's romance in What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know does at times therefore feel almost too good to be true and to last, Robin Murphy as a character (and also a bit more than Sophie Stein for me), he comes across as believable, with Sonya Somes (in Robin's narrational voice) realistically, lyrically, poetically and with empathy and understanding exploring his nascent sexuality and Robin's attraction to Tessa (a university student in his art class at Harvard who is refreshingly unaware that he is usually mostly the butt of jokes at his high school but that she, that Tessa simply does not and would not care about this anyhow). And while I am of course majorly textually glad that Sophie and Robin's relationship in What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know is shown by Somes as lasting and as even overcoming Robin's attraction to Tessa, personally, and as someone who really only started feeling comfortable in an educational setting once I was no longer at school, was attending university and realsing that I was in fact both liked and appreciated at university and not a constant object of and four bullying like at school, honestly and also a bit guiltily, part of me kind of wishes that Robin would end up with Tessa and not with Sophie.
Five stars What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know has been for me, emotionally satisfying and as such really and utterly textually delightful and wonderful (and quite surprisingly so, I should add, since I am usually not that much a fan of stories that focus mostly on romance, and therefore kudos to Sonya Somes for writing with What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know a YA story of romance that I actually have found enjoyable and also on every level). And while I certainly can and do respect that not everyone will enjoy What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know, I do have quite a bit of trouble even somewhat understanding those reviewers who are finding Robin Murphy and his parents supposedly "perverted" and horrid simply because of the life drawing aspect of What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know and that Robin is discovering the beauty of the unclothed human body and the artistic pleasures of drawing this and is also encouraged by his family and also his art teacher.
But be that as it may, I also do not and will never even remotely respect anyone who wants to see What My Mother Doesn't Know banned or restricted and I will therefore and forcefully say to the hatefully brainless, worthless "persons" (quotes are mine) who have sadly managed to get What My Girlfriend Doesn't Know banned from many school libraries and classrooms in states like Texas, Florida and the like (and yes this certainly includes politicians, school board members, lawmakers and special interest groups like that utterly putrid nanny state collectivism supporting Moms for Liberty), that book bans and cancelling (and coming from either the right or from the left), they are a sure sign of overt and dangerous dictatorial overreaching (of basically and utterly disgusting, despicable Nazism and/or Stalinism) and that ANYONE who actively supports books being banned/restricted (and is helping with this happening) is obviously totally philosophically, politically and immorally linked to such evil entities as Adolf Hitler, Hermann Goering, Josef Goebbels, Francisco Franco, Josef Stalin, Chairman Mao, Kim Jong Un, and last but not least Vladimir Putin.