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Princess in Love by Meg Cabot
Princess in Love by Meg Cabot








This and other elements such as the return of the long-lost father, bite-size chunks of information about climbing and altitude, an all-male cast, competition and suspense (can Peak be the youngest ever to summit Everest, and can he beat out a 14-year-old Nepalese boy who accompanies him?) creates the tough stuff of a “boys read.” The narrative offers enough of a bumpy ride to satisfy thrill seekers, while Peak’s softer reflective quality lends depth and some-but not too much-emotional resonance. Peak must learn to navigate the extreme and exotic terrain but negotiate a code of ethics among men. To save him, his long-lost Everest-trekking dad appears with a plan for the duo to make a life in Katmandu-a smokescreen to make Peak become the youngest person in history to summit Mount Everest.

Princess in Love by Meg Cabot

12-15)ĭare-devil mountain-climber Peak Marcello (14), decides to scale the Woolworth Building and lands in jail. The third in the series ( Princess in the Spotlight, 2001, etc.) has the best ending yet, which proves that princesses-even tall, flat-chested, algebraically challenged ones-always find true love. Princess lessons with Grandmère may be paying off in this volume, as Mia’s self-deprecating humor gives way to a newfound spunkiness. But when some of her greatest dilemmas are discovering the nuances of French kissing and a one-day suspension for thwarting a student walkout, readers can’t help but love this self-obsessed (i.e., normal) teenager. Once again, Mia captures all her ups-and mostly downs-in her diary, which is all told in perfect teenage vernacular. What is a princess to do when she doesn’t feel sparks fly after kissing Kenny, her supposed boyfriend, because she’s really in love with her best friend’s brother, high-school senior Michael Moscovitz? And, oh yeah, Michael is probably falling for a girl who cloned a fruit fly, her mother is expecting the baby of her algebra teacher, no one has asked her to the Nondenominational Winter Dance (not even Kenny), and she has to prepare for her Christmas-time introduction to the populace of Genovia.










Princess in Love by Meg Cabot