Prep Cool is the second book in the Cinderella Cleaners series, telling the story of Diana Donato and her friends who each wind up in various Cinderella-esque mishaps. In this version, Diana and her best friend Jess are invited to see their friend Will's play at a fancy prep school dance. While there, Jess dances with a boy named Jason, who is also the crush of a preppy popular girl named Brooke, leading Brooke to enact her revenge by stealing Jess's phone. To rescue the phone and her friend's reputation, Diana has to sneak into the boarding school and steal the phone back without getting caught.
I definitely preferred the original to this one, however, this story had a lot more in the way of technical prowess. The writing was much more concise and clear, just the storytelling in general seemed much improved to the previous version. However, I enjoyed the plot of this one a lot less, plus the pacing issues from the original carried through into this one as well. I will say, though, the escape portion of the book is by far the best part and, at times, is genuinely distressing, as it sincerely seems uncertain if the characters will get away with their schemes by the end, as the last book showed it wasn't afraid to offer up consequences for the character's actions.
There were quite a few new characters and unfortunately, I did not get attached to a single one of them. I wish they would have been given more time to develop as characters, but their screen time was completely overshadowed by boring filler that was completely unnecessary. And, if we're talking about characters, I really wish the other characters would be developed more as well. I knew more about Jason than I knew about Ethan, Will, Sara, or Amelia, and Jason had like two chapters of character development. The last book had this flaw as well, though, but I had hoped it would be rectified before they brought in new characters into the mix.
This was certainly a fun and quick read, but it wasn't a very good one, which is why I gave it two stars. I recognize that I am certainly not the target demographic for this, but I enjoyed these as a kid and I still enjoy them now, I just can see more of the story's flaws. And while this is certainly a flawed book, I liked a lot of things about it, from the improved writing to the time at the Academy, there is a lot to like, and I had a good time reading it, so that's what's important.