Summary Of What My Mother Doesn T Know

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Children tediously flip through the 1987 edition of the classic eye-spy book, Where’s Waldo, searching for the man in the red and white stripped sweater. As a group of children think they have succeeded in finding the illusive Waldo, an adult notices a small, undetailed image of what they assumed to be the upper part of the female anatomy. “Side boob. Seriously. Yes. In this hot mess of a book that’s supposed to make it difficult for you to find anything, someone managed to pick out an errant side boob in the beach scene of the 1987 version. Because, per usual, women’s bodies—even the cartoon ones—ruin everything and start wars and stuff. Avert your eyes forever” (Gruebel). As a result, Where’s Waldo became a part of the long list of banned
Sophie is a typical teen with best friends and the perfect boyfriend. But after she breaks up with her near perfect lover, Dylan, she starts to notice one of the more shy and awkward boys, Robin, in her art class. However, she does not think much of it. She even begins talking more with a man she met in a chat room, but after some vulgar messages, she blocks him. Time goes by and she starts to lose hope in relationships, and so by the time the Halloween dance comes up, Sophie is left without a date. At the dance, a masked man takes her hand and they start to dance together. Sophie in entranced by this nameless man and becomes infatuated with him. However, after many weeks of not knowing his identity, she starts to give up hope on the potential love interest. Sophie is so down that she decides to take a trip into the city for a day and there, in an art gallery, she runs into Robin. They hang out all day and plan a second day out for the two of them. This friendship blossoms into a relationship soon after and they fall in love (Sones
However, some adults think a few lines are hard to swallow. For example, Sophie, like any young woman, is starting to notice a change in the size of her breasts and decides to share some of her observations, “Sometimes on chilly nights I stand close to my bedroom window, unbutton my nightgown, and press my breasts against the cold glass just so I can see the amazing trick that my nipples can do” (Sones 46). This, along with a slight groping scene during her daydream, can be seen as inappropriate by concerned parents. Of course these adult situations are not the most comfortable thing to talk about, it is a natural body part that every young, female teen is getting used to at that time and it is more important to show young people that being curious about your body is okay because, “...some girls feel embarrassed…” (“How to Talk”). Young females should be encouraged to speak freely about their bodies if they do not understand something. Another example deals with a much darker scenario that most definitely should be talked about to teens, online predators. When Sophie was chatting with the guy that she had never met online, he started a conversation about what each person enjoys doing with their spare time. His response was, “I like to jerk off in libraries” (Sones 110). Sophie of course felt uncomfortable and blocked him immediately. Since the main character dealt with this issue

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