Do you remember taking sex ed in school? When I was growing up, they would pull the girls into a separate trailer to talk about a girl’s body. When I started as a middle school teacher, I taught sex ed for four years. This was the reason that I chose this book. How Girls Are Made by Mandy McGinnis definitely pinpoints what it is like for teenager’s today.

4/5 stars ★★★★☆
You can read the synopsis here: https://amzn.to/3IKxRfr
Published on: November 18, 2025
From the publisher: Sex Education meets Euphoria in this dark contemporary novel that tackles perfectionism, emotional abuse, and the dark side of social media.
What I Liked About How Girls Are Made:
As a teacher of teenagers, I feel like this would really appeal to my students. Would I recommend it to them? Yes, but not all of them. If I was a teenager, I would have eaten this book right up. It has secrets, scandals, and sex ed. I liked that McGinnis put a lot of needed information for teenagers about the world (sex ed, social media, bullying, domestic violence), without dummying it down for them. They will appreciate that also.
It also tore at my heart strings as a teacher of teenagers. I actually think this book would make teenagers think twice about their actions. That’s a good thing. I could picture my students as the main characters, and McGinnis did a nice job of portraying different types of kids that could be sitting right in my classroom.
What I Would Change:
The beginning definitely pulled me in. The last 40 pages or so were a jaw dropper. Even though I enjoyed the ending, I felt that it was abrupt. It was like I walked up to a tree, admired it, shook it, and then all of the apples hit me on the head.
I’m glad that I read the book. Even though it is a YA book, I still think adults would enjoy it.

Where To Buy How Girls Are Made and More:
- Purchase How Girls Are Made here: https://amzn.to/4f8usDj
- If you liked this book, and you would like more young adult suggestions:
- The Academy by Elin Hildebrand and Shelby Cunningham
- Influenced by Sara Darer Litman and Cindy L. Otis
- The Sister Switch by Charlotte Butterfield
- Read more of my book reviews: https://judiholst.com/book-reviews/
- Missed my Top Books of 2024? Find them here: https://judiholst.com/top-20-books-that-i-loved-in-2024/
Thank you to NetGalley, HarperCollins Children’s Books, and Mindy McGinnis for my free copy. This is my honest opinion.
Now, I’d love to hear from you: Did you have sex ed in school? Do you feel it was effective? Do you feel social media is a positive or negative in a teenager’s life? Share your thoughts in the comments below!


























