

And her father is losing in the Genovian polls-to Mia's loathsome cousin René! That senior project? It's a romance novel she secretly wrote, and no one wants to publish it.

Her first love, Michael, is back from Japan. everyone adores her dreamy boyfriend, J.P., but Mia is not sure he's the one. not to mention prom, graduation, and Genovia's first-ever elections. She aced her senior project, got accepted to her dream college(s), and has her eighteenth birthday gala coming up. It's Mia's senior year, and things seem great. All of the problems the main character is worrying about, that would seem like the end of the world for someone of that agar, give the book a whole sense of comedy.It might not be everyones cup of tea but it gives me a nice little laugh every so often.The tenth book in the #1 New York Times bestselling Princess Diaries series by Meg Cabot. As a young teenager I loved these books because they were a great read for someone my age, however now that I'm older I can enjoy this book in an entirely new way. i suppose the title having "princess" in it may make it sound childish, however this book (and the rest of the series) are hilarious. more onstantly on my pile of books to re-read. All I wish was that Mia had been more like herself, or as she was in the last books.But maybe she's just growing up. And sadI feel really sad.Despite how this review sounds, the book ended very nicely.

This whole book has such a melancholy feel to it, ya know? And I don't know if it's my own internal issues with growing up that have influenced my viewpoint on this book, or not, but either way, I finished this feeling emotionally exhausted. :(Post-last-book blues are setting in quickly.Anywho, before I become too detached from life, I would like to say that everything I hated from Princess Mia was resolved happily in Forever Princess.However, Mia was so different.
