Holy crap this book is bad. I expected something interesting at least since there appears to be some sort of controversy regarding the sex in the book. First off, yes there is sex and yes it comes across somewhat life-like but in a very clinical way. Honestly I can see why a parent might be concerne...
While Anatomy of a Boyfriend explored the situation of having your first love, first boyfriend and first sexual experiences, Anatomy of a Single Girl focuses on what happens after you break up with that first love and start to discover other sexual partners. What a refreshing read it was, too. The...
Very rarely do you see sex handled well in YA--at least, not in paranormal YA. Sometimes you do come across a contemporary novel that handles it, but it’s rarely ever the focal point of such a novel. I’ve always been a little disappointed about this, since, despite what people seem to believe, teens...
Whenever I’m asked to review a book by an author – I’m honored, but when the author has actually taken the time to see if my blog and or reading habits would match up with their book – I get ecstatic. And that’s exactly what Daria Snadowsky did when she asked me if I’d like a review copy of her book...
(As reviewed on Paper Riot.)In Anatomy of a Boyfriend, we followed Dom through her first boyfriend, first kiss, first time, and first break-up. This time, we see what comes after that. While these books are technically similar, I found the overall tone quite different. Because where the first book w...
(As reviewed on Paper Riot.)I flipped the final page of Anatomy of a Boyfriend just few minutes ago and my first thought was that it was the most refreshing and real contemporary YA book I've ever read. The second was that it was also one of the funniest. I had a lot of laugh-out-loud moments. (Thi...
As soon as I finished the first book in the Anatomy series (Anatomy of a Boyfriend), I went straight on to Anatomy of a Single Girl because I was really enjoying the honesty, humour and spectacular awkwardness of the main character, Dom. As well as the relationship and sex perspective of the first b...
When it comes to Young Adult books focusing on first relationships, I'm always a little wary - they can either be fantastically funny and awkward, or completely unrealistic. But I'd already heard good things about the Anatomy series, so I was looking forward to finding out just how this book worked ...
This review can also be found here.I enjoyed this book just as much as the first one, maybe even a bit more. Dom finally realizes that she doesn't need a guy to feel good about herself and she spends her summer not worrying about her ex or their breakup. She meets a guy named Guy and her reckless an...
Important: Our sites use cookies.
We use the information stored using cookies and similar technologies for advertising and statistics purposes.
Stored data allow us to tailor the websites to individual user's interests.
Cookies may be also used by third parties cooperating with BookLikes, like advertisers, research companies and providers of multimedia applications.
You can choose how cookies are handled by your device via your browser settings.
If you choose not to receive cookies at any time, BookLikes will not function properly and certain services will not be provided.
For more information, please go to our Privacy Policy.