Despite being from a relatively liberal part of the country, my health education was terrible. Pretty much all I "learned" was STIs can NEVER be cured (even if they can be), all forms of birth control (including condoms) don't work (ever), if you do anything before marriage you will automatically get every STI on the planet, get pregnant, give birth, and die in seven days, and once you get married, all risk of unwanted pregnancy and STIs disappears entirely.
So basically, nothing of use.
That's why I finally decided, upon seeing this book at my local library, to take my health education in my own hands.
I must say, this book was far more informative and useful than I thought it would be. Most of the time, you get sex-health books and they're so scientific that you can't understand them. It's like reading a medical text book for doctors, not teenagers. I was glad to see this book was not in the "we-need-to-tell-our-kids-this-stuff-but-we-don't-want-them-to-know-this-stuff" kind of book. It's in layman's terms. It's well-organized. It's conversational. You can learn things and not have to run for the dictionary every five seconds, and I didn't feel awkward at all while reading this.
It was also both satisfying and horrifying to see most of what I "learned" disproven in this book, much of it in the "mythbusting" sections. So for me, this book was a necessity if I wanted the facts (and the correct ones at that).
As I said, this includes mythbusting sections to correct the rumors we've heard, and other helpful sections, including a readiness checklist, safety tips, healthy relationship advice (which I think is particularly important, since I know my high school didn't really care about this aspect), and even a chapter on self-esteem (also important, despite no one ever acknowledging it). It has "crappy reasons to have sex" and even addresses the fact that "everyone's different, so here's a bunch of different sketches/descriptions/etc. rather than the one-size-fits-all and if you're black, big, or in any way not white and perfect in every way, you can find one that's right for you." It also includes a short section on legal issues. This part doesn't really give you laws (since it's different in every state and country), but it does tell you things to look out for and that you should look into (age of consent, etc.) before you go about doing anything.
What's also nice is this isn't preachy. It takes the tact of "teens are going to have sex whether we like it or not" and informs (with real facts, not made up scare tactics) rather than tell you that "you'll go to hell" or "you'll die instantaneously if you aren't married." Truthfully, I think the real facts and statistics were much more terrifying than the BS I was fed by teachers in high school (I mean, you'll die before marriage? I know that's not true. Now, 1 in four people have an STI? That's scary).
And before you think it hates on religion, it doesn't. For almost everything that is controversial in the religious/cultural sphere, it says, "if you think your religion or culture has issues with/rules against this, talk to your spiritual leader/parents/school councilor/whoever about it." Like with the legal issues, it takes this tact because addressing every religion's opinions would probably quadruple the volume of this book.
Overall, this book was helpful, informative, and a really good resource. If you are a teen or young adult, or had as atrocious an education as I did, get this book. It's got everything you need to know, and everything you want to know but no one will tell you. It's conversational, doesn't use shame or scare tactics, and most importantly, it doesn't make you feel so awkward you skim or stop reading and thus don't learn anything. Even if you think you know everything you need to know, check this book out anyway. You will learn something.