Book 1 of The Princess Diaries
Language: English
Adolescence Biography & Autobiography Diaries Family Fiction Girls & Women Identity (Philosophical concept) Identity (Psychology) Juvenile Fiction Media Tie-In Middle Atlantic Multigenerational New York (N.Y.) Northeast Princesses Royalty School & Education Schools Social Issues Travel United States Young adult fiction; American identity
Description:
Fifteen-year-old Mia Thermopolis, the witty, lovable star of Meg Cabot's __, has had it with princess lessons, also known as torture sessions: "Do they really think anyone in Genovia cares whether I know how to use a fish fork? Or if I can sit down without getting wrinkles in the back of my skirt? Or if I know how to say 'thank you' in Swahili? Shouldn't my future countrymen be more concerned with my views on the environment? And gun control? And overpopulation?" To make matters worse, she's getting these lessons from Grandmère, a rather judgmental woman who dresses her pet in chinchilla bolero jackets and has eyeliner permanently tattooed on her eyelids. Princess in the Spotlight further records Mia's path to princessdom: her artist mother's relationship with her algebra teacher (how awkward), her forced television interview, broadcast to all of America (how humiliating), and her crush on her best friend Lilly's brother Michael (how excruciating). The result is another thoroughly entertaining diary of a very human, very self-deprecating, very unprincesslike princess. (Ages 12 and older) --Karin Snelson
From Publishers Weekly
This follow-up to the Princess Diaries, the inspiration for the film starring Julie Andrews, chronicles Mai's crowning as princess of Geneva. The new monarch quickly discovers the power of an interview, as she nearly gets a teacher fired and manages to alienate her best friend and her royal subjects with a few simple sentences. Ages 12-up.
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