Synopses & Reviews
As teenagers today navigate increasingly fluid identities and choices, there is a demand for an accessible, interactive tool to help share knowledge about sex and sexual health; one that demystifies the facts and speaks frankly about experiences whose lessons often fall into the grey areas.
Since 2008, Miller and Bley have held an open call for young people to create comics that address a variety of topics involved with sex education. We have since produced several issues of a sex-ed comic called Not Your Mothers Meatloaf. The work is chosen from a vastly varied group of submissions and attempts to challenge hetero and gender normative practices in sex education. The comics address topics like body image, safer sex, consent, and relationships, from positions that have historically been left out of sex education.
These graphically illustrated personal narratives address different themes, such as Firsts,” Bodies,” Health,” Age,” and Endings.” The book will bring together the best of the material from the Not Your Mothers Meatloaf comics, along with new graphic stories and writing by the editors providing personal and sociological background.
Review
Praise for
Not Your Mother's Meatloaf"I wish I could go back in time and learn about sex from this book."Alison Bechdel, author of Are You My Mother? and Fun Home
Review
Praise for
Not Your Mother's Meatloaf"I wish I could go back in time and learn about sex from this book."Alison Bechdel, author of Are You My Mother? and Fun Home
"Not Your Mothers Meatloafseven chapters of candidly self-aware comics and writingsexplores the multifarious world of the human sexual experience. Topics include experimentation, faking orgasms, cross-dressing, learning how to casually talk about sex with friends, abusive relationships, finding liberation through positive influences, first times, last times, health, age, identity, body image, substance abuse, masturbation and strange desires. While some traditional sex-ed books can seem patronizing toward adolescents, Not Your Mother's Meatloaf consists of real people telling their own stories." -Albuquerque Weekly
About the Author
Saiya Miller graduated from Eugene Lang College, The New School for Liberal Arts. She has worked as an educator and activist, teaching art and music, as well as using comics and zines in workshops for teenagers. She lives in Brooklyn, NY and Vermont.
Liza Bley studied writing in New York City, where she also worked at Make, a craft and sewing school, and contributed sampled to the book Embroider Everything Workshop.