Confessions of a Sixteen Year Old Virgin
  • Reads 111
  • Votes 6
  • Parts 5
  • Time 10m
  • Reads 111
  • Votes 6
  • Parts 5
  • Time 10m
Ongoing, First published Jul 31, 2015
Donnie Grayson is exhausted with the children her age and the media portraying people unlike her. Being sixteen shouldn't be all about getting the guy and getting laid! But most kids at her school seem to think otherwise, and it's up to her to decide if she's going to go along with the flow or if she's going to figure out where she stands and why.
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add Confessions of a Sixteen Year Old Virgin to your library and receive updates
or
#54whatdoitag
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
Mitzi & Oz cover
Fate's Creation cover
Mask of Celibacy cover
Sandra Bullock x reader cover
Winning You Over cover
Accept cover
Being With A Jock cover
Rebecca June (GxG) cover
Ms. Anderson cover
Belong To You cover

Mitzi & Oz

37 parts Complete

Two high school misfits who hate each other. One music competition where they have to work together. Can their love of classic 80s rock unite them? ************************************************************************************************ High-school junior Mitzi is determined to hate Oz from the very first day she meets him, after he steals her cool nickname intro. She has a hard enough time fitting in with her fix-it hobby, her asexuality, and her love of 80's rock. When Mitzi manages to make friends with the popular girls, Mitzi must hide who she really is and figure out how to still pass voice class without outshining them. Oz is too busy channeling Axl Rose to care whether Mitzi likes him or not. When his newly-formed band, The Flaming Pickles (NOT his name choice), starts pulling a Fleetwood Mac, Oz sneaks into the student vocal competition auditions looking for a new lead singer, and discovers that Mitzi's voice is exactly what he needs. With the competition fast approaching, Mitzi and Oz find they'll have to work together to win, and learn the power of being their true selves.