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There are some books that are so good you read them cover to cover without stopping. The kind that can interrupt a weekend to such an extent that it's mid afternoon before you realise you've not yet got dressed or washed your face or done any of the other things you would normally do straight after breakfast if you hadn't instead picked up said paperback.
''The Boy Book'' is, needless to say, one of these books. Ruby Oliver is in her junior year (first year of 6th form) at a fancy schmanzy school in Seattle. In this, the sequel to [[''The Boyfriend List]] '' she is sans-friends and sans-boyfriend following the mortifying making-public of some very private information during the previous academic year. Ruby's not the uber-popular kind of girl who can just rock up on the first day of a new term and suddenly find herself surrounded by a brand new posse, and a selection of boys from which to take her pick. She's not the clique-leading cookie cutter stereotype Miss Blonde Cheerleader Girl. For one thing she's poor, or at least she is compared to the rich kids at her fee paying school, which she attends on a scholarship. There's no hot tub in her back yard, and expensive extra curricular activities are out of the question. Plus, she actually has to work to get some spending money, unlike the majority of her class. And, she's smart, hence the scholarship, and of course being smart is not something that's all that coveted in the high school world. No, Ruby's a bit different from the rest of her school and is acutely aware of this fact.
As she tries to make sense of a very complicated time in her life, she turns to ''The Boy Book'', a handbook she and her former friends co authored over the last few years, to help them figure out the complicated world of boys, bodies and general teen life. With sections on everything from ''The Care and Ownership of Boobs'' (if they jiggle, strap 'em down) to ''Why Girls are better than Boys'' (we look prettier and smell nicer, for a start) this is a definitive guide to surviving those high school years. With a lot of help from this book, and a little help from her various therapists (this ''is'' 21st century America after all.) Ruby starts to come to terms with what happened last year, and tries to move on to a more positive future. If only the rest of the world would just forget that darn list.

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