Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Books I've Read: On the Subject of Unmentionable Things



I admit it.  I picked this one up because of the cover.  It was just too pretty not to.  Thankfully, it turned out to be a pretty good read too.

Phoebe lives in a small town with her parents who are caring, but very busy with their business and one another.  She's a star journalist on the school paper and has a good group of friends who support and love her. She's a good girl who follows the rules, sometimes almost too well.

What no one knows about Phoebe is that she's Pom, the anonymous person behind a blog that's frank and open about all things sexual and doesn't shy away from difficult questions.  Phoebe's research is thorough and she started the blog out of a curiosity about sex and recognizing that the sex education taught in schools was not useful for real-life teens.

When one of the town's conservative mayoral candidates stumbles upon the blog and decides it's an affront to morality, she tweets about it and the blog goes viral.  With a sudden explosion of followers, Phoebe finds herself - or her alter-ego, Pom - in the firing line as the candidate demands Pom reveals their identity.  Suddenly the mayoral race becomes much more interesting as Phoebe fights to protect the things she believes in while desperately trying to keep her true self under the radar.

This was a fun read that deals with some important real-world issues facing us today.  It shows the power of social media and the responsibility people using it have.  It also shows how the clear abuse of power and platform can polarize people and spur them into action.

I just wish the characters had been a little better drawn.  I found Lydia, the Mayoral candidate almost cartoonish in her "bad guy" role.  And I never really warmed to Phoebe as a main character, which is a problem in a first-person narrative.  I did like her boyfriend, Jorge, and I thought the editor of the newspaper was a better villain than Lydia in many ways.

But overall, I enjoyed the book and the questions it posed about modern society.  Well worth a look!

But don't just listen to me.  Here's the blurb:


A girl rewrites sex education, one viral post at a time, in this fiercely honest and delightfully awkward novel by the award-winning author of Words on Bathroom Walls.

Phoebe Townsend is a rule follower . . . or so everyone thinks. She’s an A student who writes for her small-town school newspaper. But what no one knows is that Phoebe is also Pom—the anonymous teen who’s rewriting sex education on her blog and social media.

Phoebe is not a pervert. No, really. Her unconventional hobby is just a research obsession. And sex should not be a secret. As long as Phoebe stays undercover, she’s sure she’ll fly through junior year unnoticed. . . .

That is, until Pom goes viral, courtesy of mayoral candidate Lydia Brookhurst. The former beauty queen labels Phoebe’s work an “assault on morality,” riling up her supporters and calling on Pom to reveal her identity. But Phoebe is not backing down. With her anonymity on the line, is it all worth the fight?

Julia Walton delivers a brutally honest novel about sex, social media, and the courage to pursue truth when misinformation is rife. Who knew truth could be so scandalous?

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