Perhaps one of Netflix’s most popular series is Sex Education, a lot of people love it and millions have seen it, but I’m one of those people who hasn’t reached the big hype yet and who doesn’t have much idea about the series, I don’t really know anything about it, but this volume gave me a little taste of what I can expect from Sex Education. After reading, I got really excited about it, and if I know it well, it has already made its three-season debut. I think it was perfect for catching up and having an insight. It was neither too serious nor too funny. It fun, turns off and gives a kind of picture.
The volume itself is not something long, but it is all the more meaningful. Pretty much everything happens through about 280 pages. We get a riddle here, we can get to know the characters better, unravel a mystery, and drop into a medium that a lot of people have already liked thanks to the series. In the first few pages of the volume we can get to know the main characters, I was happy about it only because, to tell the truth, based on the cover, I had no idea who it was and it took a while for the picture to come together about who it was. But once that was done, I felt like we were racing forward in the plot, and every little detail was neatly in place. The picture came together and I saw the whole thing. From start to finish. What caught me for the first time was that the writer didn’t put simple, boring characters in the spotlight, but people who were interesting and who were able to take the plot on their backs. There’s Maeve, who at first seemed weird at first, it turned out that in the end it wasn’t at all, he just thinks differently than the others, but it’s a huge point because of his passion for reading. Otis remained a huge question mark for me all along, not only because he was a little philosophical or just too weird the way he spoke, but also because I couldn’t get to a vineyard about him. Typically the character we can identify as socially awkward.
Then there’s, of course, Eric and Amiee, whom I love, but really. Incredibly large shapes, even if they’re a little weird, but that’s exactly what’s beautiful about them. It seems that Sex Education likes to focus on not-so-ordinary, slightly more bizarre characters. Everyone should prescribe friends like Eric and Aimee because nothing is ever boring with them, something always happens and they are able to shake one up so that it is not true. They are lovable, loose and special. Aimee is simply brilliant, a bit of a boob, but that's fine for him.
What came incredibly along with the story’s rapid course was that the writer had forged teens from different social backgrounds and shown that friendship breaks down all norms and rules. Serving as a perfect addition to the series, as if I knew for sure it would have made me even more passionate than it did by default.
The story itself has to do with Sean, which makes the plot exciting, mysterious and really wild, which is a bit windy, mysterious, but also really phenomenal at times. It’s typically the story that shuts off for a few hours and then sits down in front of Netflix in the evening to start, or just restarting the series if you’ve already seen it. It is also an addictive and fun recreation. No wonder he has so many fans and has already taken so many people off his feet.