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Book Description
Mia’s got everything a girl could possibly want. She’s a princess – and she’s got a boyfriend! But that’s where it all goes wrong. Because Kenny is just NOT the guy she really wants. Michael’s the one she’s loved forever – but he’s going out with someone infinitely cleverer than Mia. Someone who canContinue
25 Reviews
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Candy said on Jan 6, 2012 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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Finally Mia got what she wanted most – her first boyfriend – in this book. Yet the problem was not solved. She just could not tell which feeling was stronger: the joy that it was Kenny, her biology partner whom she LIKED; or the disappointment that it was not Michael, her best friend’s brother. ... (continue)
Candy said on Jan 6, 2012 about the Mass Market Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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Still a lot of fun reading the fourth part.
Fully understand how Mia felt towards Michael, sort of worried being dumped though not even going out yet and the whole not-chasing-boy thing.
It turned out that Mia's worry was silly, because Michael was so, so caring and understanding a guy. ... (continue)
Candy said on Jan 6, 2012 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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In this volume, Mia had been wishing to go with Michael to the school prom in which junior was only allowed if invited by a senior. It was the dream of Mia to be escorted by and dance with her very true love there in a fabulous nightgown. However, Michael treated the prom as a lame thing.
On th ... (continue)
Candy said on Jan 6, 2012 | Add your feedback
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Volume 6. Mia still had a lot of problems in her life:
1. She was nominated by her best friend Lilly to run for the Student Council President against the most popular girl Lana in School.
2. Her importing 10,000 snails for consuming the killer algae had almost make her country-one-day-she-wil ... (continue)
Candy said on Jan 6, 2012 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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To me, it's not as hilarious as its predecessors are. Maybe it's because that I'm no longer a teen; it's hard for me to relate to what Mia is going through. Still, it's funny to see how Mia is doing with her roller coaster ride life and her presidential rants; I kinda agreed with what her writing te ... (continue)
火煉 said on Oct 18, 2010 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
Book Details
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Rating:




(308)
- English Books
- eBook 224 Pages
- ISBN-10: 0330473662
- ISBN-13: 9780330473668
- Publisher: Pan Macmillan
- Pub date: Mar 21, 2011
- Also available as: Mass Market Paperback, Paperback, Hardcover, Audio CD, Audio Cassette, Library Binding, School & Library Binding, Unbound and Others
- In other languages: other languages
Groups with this in collection
Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9780330473668 | eBook | $9.58 | $6.92 | The Book Depository |
| Other editions → | ||||
| + 28 copies tradable: → | ||||
A girlish book. The diary of Mia.
Mia was that kind of below-average unpopular teen girl, studying at Albert Einstein High School, aged 14 and weak at Maths. Her parents were divorced and she was used to do all the housework.
She was so common and unnoticed by the others, until one day ... (continue)
A girlish book. The diary of Mia.
Mia was that kind of below-average unpopular teen girl, studying at Albert Einstein High School, aged 14 and weak at Maths. Her parents were divorced and she was used to do all the housework.
She was so common and unnoticed by the others, until one day her father told her that she was actually the heir to the throne of Genovia.
All of a sudden, she became a princess. She needed to wear her first formal dress, put on make-ups, learn how to use different forks, that sorts of "princessy things". She also came across a serious break-up with her closest friend Lilly, whom she had known since kindergarten, and went out with her first date, who was the cutest and most popular boy in the school.
A story of growing-up with laughter and tears. Probably will go on to later series.
American style spoken English with quite some slang and vocabularies.
"I got to spend my entire Sunday having the quadratic formula drilled into me by my demented father, who kept rubbing his bald head and screaming in frustration when he found out I don't know how to multiply fractions."
"It's not like I don't appreciate being asked, and all, but I really don't think I can come."
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