The Princess Diaries
By Meg Cabot
4/5
()
About this ebook
The first book in the #1 New York Times bestselling Princess Diaries series by Meg Cabot.
Mia Thermopolis is pretty sure there’s nothing worse than being a five-foot-nine, flat-chested freshman, who also happens to be flunking Algebra. Is she ever in for a surprise.
First Mom announces that she’s dating Mia’s Algebra teacher. Then Dad has to go and reveal that he is the crown prince of Genovia. And guess who still doesn’t have a date for the Cultural Diversity Dance?
The Princess Diaries is the first book in the beloved, bestselling series that inspired the feature film starring Anne Hathaway and Julie Andrews.
Editor's Note
Whimsical & fun…
A whimsical fairytale-turned-reality by the “New York Times” bestselling author, this introductory novel to the famous Princess Diaries series is a fast & fun read.
Meg Cabot
MEG CABOT’s many books for both adults and teens have included numerous #1 New York Times bestsellers, with more than twenty-five million copies sold worldwide. Her Princess Diaries series was made into two hit films by Disney, with a third movie coming soon. Meg currently lives in Key West, Florida, with her husband and various cats.
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Titles in the series (11)
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Reviews for The Princess Diaries
603 ratings84 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be one of their favorite novels, especially for teenagers. It helps improve English vocabulary and is loved by many. Some reviewers find it to be a childhood favorite and a very good book. However, there is one negative review that mentions the book being annoying to read and lacking the good parts from the movie adaptation. Overall, readers highly recommend this book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5:) I did prefer the movie though . . .
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This is one of those very, very rare occasions where I preferred the movie to the book. Nothing about this book appealed. The characters all annoyed me and I disliked Mia's voice. Couldn't wait to finish! Thankfully, it was a short, easy read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Princess Diaries is not a serious literary work. In fact it is the opposite. It is fun and entertaining "chick lit" but that doesn't mean it should be brushed aside. Teens will look to Mia and find a remarkable and uplifting protagonist who is just trying to find her place in high school. The reader will make the connection with Mia and see that she is just another teenager like them. It will give especially female students a positive character that they can relate to and while realistically they may not be going through the same situation as becoming a princess, they will relate to the angst of being socially accepted among their peers. The writing is in the style of a teenager's voice - quirky, funny and sometimes silly. Middle school students will enjoy this series as part of their leisure reading list.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Chic lit! always a good distraction! light read! and as usual Meg Cabot did a good job!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Mia Thermopolis is a fairly typical ninth-grader: tall, gawky, failing Algebra, wondering when she will have her first kiss, her first date, or grow breasts. She lives with her mother in Greenwich Village, hanging out with her friend Lilly Moscovitz and Lilly's brother Michael, being tormented by Lana Weinberger, and crushing on Josh Richter. Then her father drops a bomb on her - he's not just a politician from the small European country of Genovia, he's actually the crown prince, and she is the heir to the throne.The book revolves around one of the more common childhood fantasies - what if I'm really a princess? - and points out some of the problems that would come with that, namely being stalked by paparazzi and trying to decide if boys like you for you or because it will get them in People. While Mia is getting princess lessons from her Grandmere, she's also dealing with typical teenage problems (bullies, boys and best friends). Mia's social life is tame compared to her New York neighbors in Gossip Girls, but aside from the princess thing she's quite true-to-life - she speaks the way a 13-year-old would actually speak, and sees situations the way they would. This book is the first in a long series, and has become a bit dated (there Lilly's public access TV show would be a vlog on YouTube now, and the 'Party of Five" references will likely not make sense to a modern 13-year-old). But the central premise and funny and frothy text should win over younger teens.What to read next: the book is the first in a long series, so that should keep readers happy for a while.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A fun YA where ordinary fourteen-year-old Mia Thermopolis learns that she is a princess in a small European principality. At first this knowledge just makes her life harder, giving her one more thing to worry about on top of stress over flunking algebra, worrying that no boy will ever ask her out, and dealing with the mean girl at school. But eventually the things she learns as her grandmother helps her learn to "be" a princess also help her with her ordinary teen problems too. I thought the particulars of the princessness could have been more fleshed out, especially given that that was the premise, but the story was nice anyway. The book is full of pop culture references, and I wonder what a kid reading it today would make of them (it was published in 2000). Some of them made me stop and think now, fifteen years on, and I was the perfect age to have been aware of all of them at the time.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Very cute! There are some chuckles. Easy to read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Mia was one of the most relatable heroines that I have read about in a long time. The story was fresh and frothy while bubbling over with girl power and hilarity. Drawing on the fact that yes, every girl secretly wishes she was a princess, Meg Cabot creates a story where, this actually happened to a girl.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5My enjoyment of this book was pleasantly surprising. Nothing like the movies (AT ALL), I found the story far more interesting. A great coming of age novel - something everyone will find a piece to relate too.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/52½ stars - It would have been 3 but the editing of this ebook edition was lousy. Lots of missing spaces, which was annoying but not to distracting & all the letter e's with an accent (such as é) were shown as a question mark (Grandm?re instead of Grandmére).
I found the story had some surprises for someone like me who has seen the movie, such as the presence of her father through almost all of the book! - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Book is much better than the movie: more developed characters, more interesting subplots. Recommended.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I've been thinking about reading this book for a while, and finally did. It didn't cover much time (which must be why there are a zillion sequels), and was pretty different from the movie. It was still great though. I listened to it on CD and it was read by Anne Hathaway, which was a nice touch.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Absolutely adorable. However, if you have seen the movie, you must forget about Julie Andrews as the queen. It does not fit with the book's version at all.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book is about a regular school girl who wasn't a part of the "popular" group. But not long after starting her freshman year, Mia finds out that her mom is dating her algebra teacher which really freaked her out. Then Mia finds out that she is the princess of Genovia. Now Mia must take princess lessons with her grandmother who refuses to speak English with Mia. She insists on speaking French. Mia was hoping that nobody would find out that she was a princess, but things didn't go the way she planned. Her grandmother told the press and now there's no hiding who Mia really is.I enjoyed this book very much. I love the way Meg (the author) writes the book in a journal fashion. I can also see that Meg knows exactly how Mia feels, like Meg is really Mia. I was a little upset that Josh Richter used Mia just to get on the cover of newspapers. But everything turns out fine in the end.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A great story with a fun, and quirky narrator. The main character was much more human than I expected.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Princess Diaries is about Mia who finds out that she's a princess. It deals with he first month or so after finding out. For once the movie is much better than the book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Mia Thermopolis is a high school freshman living her normal life in the suburbs. She is not miss popular but she dreams of her crush, Josh Richter, a gorgeous senior. Her parents are divorced and Mia lives with her mom. One day, Mia’s dad comes into town to see Mia and tell her that he is the prince of Genovia, a small country in Europe, and that she is the princess! Everyone would love to hear that they are a princess but not Mia. She really just wanted to be normal Mia and she was not going to let this “small” news ruin her high school life. Can she keep it a secret or will this turn her world upside down? This book will keep the readers hooked on Mia’s life. It is written in a form of a diary and by reading it, the readers will agree that she really is just a normal, average girl. This is a great way to get readers into what teen life is like (except for the princess thing) and into writing a diary. It deals with real adolescent tribulations that readers might be able to relate to. This is a fun read that readers can enjoy. They will be able to what life is like for a girl whose dream is to become normal get hit with a princess title. If you want to be a princess and learn what princesses need to be like, through this book, Mia will let you know what it is like.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Cute, entertaining yarn about an awkward 9th grade girl who discovers she's a princess.If I was a tween, I would latch onto these books and never let them go. Mia's strong but vulnerable character is believable and charming.I doubt I'll read the rest of the books in this series, but I'm glad I finally read one.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Laugh out loud funny. The story line is a bit different than the movie which kept the book interesting, but I also missed some of the more familiar dialog from the movie.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was very different from the movie, but it was still a fun, quick read. Anne Hathaway narrated the audioversion and did an excellent job capturing the character of Mia (as I pictured her). Queen Clarice was nothing like my idea of her (from Julie Andrews), but she was definitely more fun Meg Cabot's way. Definitely not Mary Poppins here. The plot was very teen-driven, but I enjoyed the break from intense plots. I'll definitely continue the series and see where it goes.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Saw the movie.....NOTHING LIKE THE BOOKS!!!!!!! the books are way better than the movie ( no offense Disney) but the movie was still good and very entertaining:)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Great young adult stuff - very entertaining and sweet.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I'm studying YA (okay, I need even *more* fluff in my reading life). Some are better than others. This one is cute bordering on annoying. I can see the appeal. it's like a train wreck.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I had actually read The Princess Diaries before. Like, when it first came out... so I didn't remember most of it. But I've been going through this Meg Cabot phase and decided that I was going to read the entire series. Which is why I read the first novel again. And I absolutely loved it.If you've seen the movie starring Anne Hathaway and Julie Andrew, then you're probably familiar with the plot... young American girl finds out that she is actually a princess of a small country in Europe. There were a lot of differences from the book and movie though...1. Mia's dad is not dead; he did have cancer and now can't have children again but not dead2. Mia calls her grandmother "grandmere" because they speak in French to one another3. Mia is only a freshman but I think she's maybe a senior in the movie, which is why she drives in the movieAnd just a few other things. But that's understandable; it happens all the time- Harry Potter, Twilight. Either way, I liked it. And if you've been paying attention to my In My Mailbox entries, you would have noticed that I've already purchased the next 4 books in the series and 3 other Meg Cabot books to read. So, I'm going to hit up on the next 4 Princess Diaries... and then read something else (not Meg Cabot-- depending on what I'm feeling.)
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5easy read, for lower level students - high interest, but mostly girls. A combination of various formats (diary entries, lists, notes from classes, IMs)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I've always been curious as to how this book stacked up against the movie. All of the major plot elements are here, including the best friend, her brother, the teacher/boyfriend issue, and the sudden revelation about being a princess. In the book, though, Mia's dad is still alive but unable to have any more kids, Genovia is only a principality rather than a kingdom, and grandmother Clarisse is called "Grandmere" and is a rather awful woman who drinks, smokes, and generally seems to dislike everything. I will happily take Julie Andrews any day over this woman. Very fast read, though, in part because there wasn't really any new material to cover if you have seen the Disney film. Also, there being a Disney film is sort of funny since Lilly keeps referring to Disney as a fascist corporation. Off to read book 2!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I never re-read books, but I bought this for fifty cents and picked it up. The film is different, but each are good by themselves. I love how much voice Meg Cabot puts in her writing and her books are mostly in the form of journals. Princess Mia is a very likeable character that is very endearing. She is obsessed with the cutest boy in school (who wouldn't be?) and he asks her out when he finds out when she is a princess. It can be a little slow and you want to hit Mia for being obsessed with him, but I enjoyed the book. This book was written in 2000 and I find it amusing when the author references beepers and Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Very Good Book! :]
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Listened to this a while ago, plus have bookcrossed copies. It was a fun little read/listen, and I loved thinking of Julie Andrews in the movie. Easy to imagine.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5There’s a paradoxical question about, if one had the chance to go back in time, what wisdom would they impart on their younger selves? Seeing as how I really haven’t learned much in ten years, I’m not a fan of this question. (Also, John Green dealt with it better in one of his interviews.) If I had a time machine, I would go back to two very specific times, and tell my younger self, “Heads up, this is going to be on the test.” The second of these dates is about winter on my freshman year, wherein I run into my awkward, geeky fifteen year old self contemplating the incredibly girly looking book (it’s pink and has a sparkly tiara on the cover!) . To which I, being slightly wiser about these things, hand it over and say, “This book is going to change your life.”
Sound presumptuous, I know. Especially when you realize that in those ten years, I’ve gone through many more books of higher quality which I recommend on a daily basis. (Ignoring the fact that many of these books weren’t around in 2001…) What is it about this book that I keep coming back to? Why do I hold this up above all of these other books and authors that I love and adore?
Here’s why: I could relate. When I picked this up way, way back in the day, I found in Mia a character I could relate to. Someone who was going through a lot of the same things that I was dealing with at the age. (Without the princess thing. Or the father’s cancer. Or my mother dating a teacher. I think the only thing I had in common with Mia was that we were both failing algebra.) At the time, I had a hard time finding books that could deliver that. Sure, I read very good YA books, but I never connected with the characters. And to this day, even on the nth-millionth reading of it, I still love this book. Sure, I think Mia’s fairly immature about certain things, and that a lot of the characters can be grossly exaggerated. But there’s still that sense of being able to relate to these characters, even if it’s more “Yup, that’s how I used to be.” It’s such a fun book, and a well-done one at that. The only real problem I had with this reread is that the copy I have replaced a lot of the outdated references, to which my mind did a mental halt whenever I start seeing Kayne West get name-dropped. (Again, I read this book all the time during my sophomore year. Yeah. Bit obsessed.)
So, yes, I’ve read much better books. I’ve found other authors to fawn over. My writing’s gotten better with more exposure. But to be completely and perfectly honest with you? The Princess Diaries has done a lot more for me, both as a writer and a reader, than most other books have.
It’s still my favoritest book ever.
Book preview
The Princess Diaries - Meg Cabot
Tuesday, September 23
Sometimes it seems like all I ever do is lie.
My mom thinks I’m repressing my feelings about this. I say to her, No, Mom, I’m not. I think it’s really neat. As long as you’re happy, I’m happy.
Mom says, I don’t think you’re being honest with me.
Then she hands me this book. She tells me she wants me to write down my feelings in this book, since, she says, I obviously don’t feel I can talk about them with her.
She wants me to write down my feelings? Okay, I’ll write down my feelings:
I CAN’T BELIEVE SHE’S DOING THIS TO ME!
Like everybody doesn’t already think I’m a freak. I’m practically the biggest freak in the entire school. I mean, let’s face it: I’m five foot nine, flat-chested, and a freshman. How much more of a freak could I be?
If people at school find out about this, I’m dead. That’s it. Dead.
Oh, God, if you really do exist, please don’t let them find out about this.
There are four million people in Manhattan, right? That makes about two million of them guys. So out of TWO MILLION guys, she has to go out with Mr. Gianini. She can’t go out with some guy I don’t know. She can’t go out with some guy she met at D’Agostinos or wherever. Oh, no.
She has to go out with my Algebra teacher.
Thanks, Mom. Thanks a whole lot.
Wednesday, September 24, Fifth Period
Lilly’s like, Mr. Gianini’s cool.
Yeah, right. He’s cool if you’re Lilly Moscovitz. He’s cool if you’re good at Algebra, like Lilly Moscovitz. He’s not so cool if you’re flunking Algebra, like me.
He’s not so cool if he makes you stay after school EVERY SINGLE SOLITARY DAY from 2:30 to 3:30 to practice the FOIL method when you could be hanging out with all your friends. He’s not so cool if he calls your mother in for a parent/teacher conference to talk about how you’re flunking Algebra, then ASKS HER OUT.
And he’s not so cool if he’s sticking his tongue in your mom’s mouth.
Not that I’ve actually seen them do this. They haven’t even been on their first date yet. And I don’t think my mom would let a guy put his tongue in her mouth on the first date.
At least, I hope not.
I saw Josh Richter stick his tongue in Lana Weinberger’s mouth last week. I had this totally close-up view of it, since they were leaning up against Josh’s locker, which is right next to mine. It kind of grossed me out.
Though I can’t say I’d mind if Josh Richter kissed me like that. The other day Lilly and I were at Bigelows picking up some alpha hydroxy for Lilly’s mom, and I noticed Josh waiting at the checkout counter. He saw me and he actually sort of smiled and said, Hey.
He was buying Drakkar Noir, a men’s cologne. I got a free sample of it from the salesgirl. Now I can smell Josh whenever I want to, in the privacy of my own home.
Lilly says Josh’s synapses were probably misfiring that day, due to heatstroke or something. She said he probably thought I looked familiar but couldn’t place my face without the cement block walls of Albert Einstein High behind me. Why else, she asked, would the most popular senior in high school say hey to me, Mia Thermopolis, a lowly freshman?
But I know it wasn’t heatstroke. The truth is, when he’s away from Lana and all his jock friends, Josh is a totally different person. The kind of person who doesn’t care if a girl is flat-chested or wears size-ten shoes. The kind of person who can see beyond all that into the depths of a girl’s soul. I know because when I looked into his eyes that day at Bigelows, I saw the deeply sensitive person inside him, struggling to get out.
Lilly says I have an overactive imagination and a pathological need to invent drama in my life. She says the fact that I’m so upset about my mom and Mr. G is a classic example.
"If you’re that upset about it, just tell your mom, Lilly says.
Tell her you don’t want her going out with him. I don’t understand you, Mia. You’re always going around, lying about how you feel. Why don’t you just assert yourself for a change? Your feelings have worth, you know."
Oh, right. Like I’m going to bum my mom out like that. She’s so totally happy about this date, it’s enough to make me want to throw up. She goes around cooking all the time. I’m not even kidding. She made pasta for the first time last night in like months. I had already opened the Suzie’s Chinese take-out menu, and she says, Oh, no cold sesame noodles tonight, honey. I made pasta.
Pasta! My mom made pasta!
She even observed my rights as a vegetarian and didn’t put any meatballs in the sauce.
I don’t understand any of this.
THINGS TO DO
Buy cat litter
Finish FOIL worksheet for Mr. G
Stop telling Lilly everything
Go to Pearl Paint: get soft lead pencils, spray mount, canvas stretchers (for Mom)
World Civ report on Iceland (5 pages, double spaced)
Stop thinking so much about Josh Richter
Drop off laundry
October rent (make sure Mom has deposited Dad’s check!!!)
Be more assertive
Measure chest
Thursday, September 25
In Algebra today all I could think about was how Mr. Gianini might put his tongue in my mom’s mouth tomorrow night during their date. I just sat there, staring at him. He asked me a really easy question—I swear, he saves all the easy ones for me, like he doesn’t want me to feel left out or something—and I totally didn’t even hear it. I was like, What?
Then Lana Weinberger made that sound she always makes and leaned over to me so that all her blond hair swished onto my desk. I got hit by this giant wave of perfume, and then Lana hissed in this really mean voice:
FREAK.
Only she said it like it had more than one syllable. Like it was spelled FUR-REEK.
How come nice people like Princess Diana get killed in car wrecks but mean people like Lana never do? I don’t understand what Josh Richter sees in her. I mean, yeah, she’s pretty. But she’s so mean. Doesn’t he notice?
Maybe Lana is nice to Josh, though. I’d sure be nice to Josh. He is the best-looking boy in Albert Einstein High School. A lot of the boys look totally geeky in our school’s uniform, which for boys is gray pants, white shirt, and black sweater, long-sleeved or vest. Not Josh, though. He looks like a model in his uniform. I am not kidding.
Anyway. Today I noticed that Mr. Gianini’s nostrils stick out A LOT. Why would you want to go out with a guy whose nostrils stick out so much? I asked Lilly this at lunch and she said, I’ve never noticed his nostrils before. Are you gonna eat that dumpling?
Lilly says I need to stop obsessing. She says I’m taking my anxiety over the fact that this is only our first month in high school and I already have an F in something, and transferring it to anxiety about Mr. Gianini and my mom. She says this is called displacement.
It sort of sucks when your best friend’s parents are psychoanalysts.
Today after school the Drs. Moscovitz were totally trying to analyze me. I mean, Lilly and I were just sitting there playing Boggle. And every five minutes it was like, Girls, do you want some Snapple? Girls, there’s a very interesting squid documentary on the Discovery channel. And by the way, Mia, how do you feel about your mother starting to date your Algebra teacher?
I said, I feel fine about it.
Why can’t I be more assertive?
But what if Lilly’s parents run into my mom at Jefferson Market or something? If I told them the truth, they’d definitely tell her. I don’t want my mom to know how weird I feel about this, not when she’s so happy about it.
The worst part was that Lilly’s older brother Michael overheard the whole thing. He immediately started laughing his head off, even though I don’t see anything funny about it.
He went, "Your mom is dating Frank Gianini? Ha! Ha! Ha!"
So great. Now Lilly’s brother Michael knows.
So then I had to start begging him not to tell anybody. He’s in fifth period Gifted and Talented class with me and Lilly, which is the biggest joke of a class, because Mrs. Hill, who’s in charge of the G & T program at Albert Einstein, doesn’t care what we do as long as we don’t make too much noise. She hates it when she has to come out of the teachers’ lounge, which is right across the hall from the G & T room, to yell at us.
Anyway, Michael is supposed to use fifth period to work on his on-line webzine, Crackhead. I’m supposed to use it for catching up on my Algebra homework.
But anyway, Mrs. Hill never checks to see what we’re doing in G & T, which is probably good, since mostly what we’re all doing is figuring out ways to lock the new Russian kid, who’s supposedly this musical genius, in the supply closet so we don’t have to listen to any more Stravinsky on his stupid violin.
But don’t think that just because Michael and I are united against Boris Pelkowski and his violin he’d keep quiet about my mom and Mr. G.
What Michael kept saying was, What’ll you do for me, huh, Thermopolis? What’ll you do for me?
But there’s nothing I can do for Michael Moscovitz. I can’t offer to do his homework, or anything. Michael is a senior (just like Josh Richter). Michael has gotten all straight A’s his entire life (just like Josh Richter). Michael will probably go to Yale or Harvard next year (just like Josh Richter).
What could I do for someone like that?
Not that Michael’s perfect, or anything. Unlike Josh Richter, Michael is not on the crew team. Michael isn’t even on the debate team. Michael does not believe in organized sports, or organized religion, or organized anything, for that matter. Instead, Michael spends almost all of his time in his room. I once asked Lilly what he does in there, and she said she and her parents employ a don’t ask, don’t tell policy with Michael.
I bet he’s in there making a bomb. Maybe he’ll blow up Albert Einstein High School as a senior prank.
Occasionally, Michael comes out of his room and makes sarcastic comments. Sometimes when he does this he is not wearing a shirt. Even though he does not believe in organized sports, I have noticed that Michael has a really nice chest. His stomach muscles are extremely well defined.
I have never mentioned this to Lilly.
Anyway, I guess Michael got tired of my offering to do stuff like walk his sheltie, Pavlov, and take his mom’s empty Tab cans back to Gristedes for the deposit money, which is his weekly chore. Because in the end Michael just said, in this disgusted voice, Forget it, okay, Thermopolis?
and went back into his room.
I asked Lilly why he was so mad, and she said because he’d been sexually harassing me but I didn’t notice.
How embarrassing! Supposing Josh Richter starts sexually harassing me someday (I wish) and I don’t notice? God, I’m so stupid sometimes.
Anyway, Lilly said not to worry about Michael telling his friends at school about my mom and Mr. G, since Michael has no friends. Then Lilly wanted to know why I cared about Mr. Gianini’s nostrils sticking out so much, since I’m not the one who has to look at them, my mom is.
And I said, Excuse me, I have to look at them from 9:55 to 10:55 and from 2:30 to 3:30 EVERY SINGLE DAY, except Saturdays and Sundays and national holidays and the summer. If I don’t flunk, that is, and have to go to summer school.
And if they get married, then I’ll have to look at them EVERY SINGLE DAY, SEVEN DAYS A WEEK, MAJOR HOLIDAYS INCLUDED.
Define set: collection of objects; element or member belongs to a set
A = {Gilligan, Skipper, Mary Ann}
rule specifies each element
A = {x|x is one of the castaways on Gilligan’s Island}
Friday, September 26
LILLY MOSCOVITZ’S LIST OF HOTTEST GUYS
(compiled during World Civ, with commentary by Mia Thermopolis)
Josh Richter (agree—six feet of unadulterated hotness. Blond hair, often falling into his clear blue eyes, and that sweet, sleepy smile. Only drawback: he has the bad taste to date Lana Weinberger)
Boris Pelkowski (strongly disagree. Just because he played his stupid violin at Carnegie Hall when he was twelve does not make him hot. Plus he tucks his school sweater into his pants, instead of wearing it out, like a normal person)
Pierce Brosnan, best James Bond ever (disagree—I liked Timothy Dalton better)
Daniel Day Lewis in Last of the Mohicans (agree—stay alive, no matter what occurs)
Prince William of England (duh)
Leonardo in Titanic (As if! That is so 1998)
Mr. Wheeton, the crew coach (hot, but taken. Seen opening the door to the teachers’ lounge for Mademoiselle Klein)
That guy in that jeans ad on that giant billboard in Times Square (totally agree. Who IS that guy? They should give him his own TV series)
Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman’s boyfriend (whatever happened to him? He was hot!)
Joshua Bell, the violinist (totally agree. It would be so cool to date a musician—just not Boris Pelkowski)
Later on Friday
I was measuring my chest and totally not thinking about the fact that my mom was out with my Algebra teacher when my dad called. I don’t know why, but I lied and told him Mom was at her studio. Which is so weird, because obviously Dad knows Mom dates. But for some reason, I just couldn’t tell him about Mr. Gianini.
This afternoon during my mandatory review session with Mr. Gianini, I was sitting there practicing the FOIL method (first, outside, inside, last; first, outside, inside, last—Oh, my God, when am I ever going to have to actually use the FOIL method in real life? WHEN???) and all of a sudden Mr. Gianini said, Mia, I hope you don’t feel, well, uncomfortable about my seeing your mother socially.
Only for some reason for a second I thought he said SEXUALLY, not socially. And then I could feel my face getting totally hot. I mean like BURNING. And I said, Oh, no, Mr. Gianini, it doesn’t bother me at all.
And Mr. Gianini said, Because if it bothers you, we can talk about it.
I guess he must have figured out I was lying, since my face was so red.
But all I said was, Really, it doesn’t bother me. I mean, it bothers me a LITTLE, but really, I’m fine with it. I mean, it’s just a date, right? Why get upset about one measly date?
That was when Mr. Gianini said, Well, Mia, I don’t know if it’s going to be one measly date. I really like your mother.
And then, I don’t even know how, but all of a sudden I heard myself saying, Well, you better. Because if you do anything to make her cry, I’ll kick your butt.
Oh, my God! I can’t even believe I said the word butt to a teacher! My face got even REDDER after that, which I wouldn’t have thought possible. Why is it that the only time I can tell the truth is when it’s guaranteed to get me into trouble?
But I guess I am feeling sort of weird about the whole thing. Maybe Lilly’s parents were right.
Mr. Gianini, though, was totally cool. He smiled in this funny way and said, I have no intention of making your mother cry, but if I ever do, you have my permission to kick my butt.
So that was okay, sort of.
Anyway, Dad sounded really weird on the phone. But then again, he always does. Transatlantic phone calls suck because I can hear the ocean swishing around in the background and it makes me all nervous, like the fish are listening, or something. Plus Dad didn’t even want to talk to me. He wanted to talk to Mom. I suppose somebody died, and he wants Mom to break it to me gently.
Maybe it was Grandmère. Hmmm. . . .
My breasts have grown exactly none since last summer. Mom was totally wrong. I did not have a growth spurt when I turned fourteen, like she did. I will probably never have a growth spurt, at least not on my chest. I only have growth spurts UP, not OUT. I am now the tallest girl in my class.
Now if anybody asks me to the Cultural Diversity Dance next month (yeah, right) I won’t be able to wear a strapless dress because there isn’t anything on my chest to hold it up.
Saturday, September 27
I was asleep when my mom got home from her date last night (I stayed up as late as I could, because I wanted to know what happened, but I guess all that measuring wore me out), so I didn’t get to ask her how it went until this morning when I went out into the kitchen to feed Fat Louie. Mom was up already, which was weird, because usually she sleeps later than me, and I’m a teenager, I’m supposed to be the one sleeping all the time.
But Mom’s been depressed ever since her last boyfriend turned out to be a Republican.
Anyway, she was in there, humming in a happy way and making pancakes. I nearly died of shock to see her actually cooking something so early in the morning, let alone something vegetarian.
Of course she had a fabulous time. They went to dinner at Monte’s (not too shabby, Mr. G!) and then walked around the West Village and went to some bar and sat outside in the back garden until nearly two in the morning, just talking. I kind of tried to find out if there’d