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Hit Girls: Britney, Taylor, Beyoncé, and the Women Who Built Pop's Shiniest Decade

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An entertaining and deeply nostalgic dive into how female pop stars broke through the music industry in the 2000s and altered the cultural landscape forever, from the Ringer writer and Every Single Album podcast cohost

Hit Girls bridges our butterfly-clipped, bedazzled past with today’s music world, revealing how the pop songs we belted in our bedrooms shaped everything we’re streaming now.”—Kate Kennedy, New York Times bestselling author of One in a Millennial

Low-rise jeans, butterfly clips, The Lizzie McGuire Movie, and Paris Hilton’s nights out. The early 2000s were a time of major moments in fashion, media, celebrity culture, and especially music. The aughts were a particularly fruitful era for female artists—still the only decade in the history of recorded music when women made up more than half the list of highest-grossing performers—and especially pop stars. Artists such as Britney Spears, Taylor Swift, Rihanna, and Beyoncé were leading the charge—their success not only leading to a new respect for female artists, but for pop stardom itself.

In Hit Girls, Nora Princiotti examines how these artists redefined the role of the pop star within the music industry and culture more broadly, and fundamentally set the stage for the women who top the charts today. Princiotti unpacks the shifts in genre, technology, and celebrity culture that sparked this evolution through the stories of the biggest names in aughties pop. Like how Britney opened the bubblegum floodgates at the start of the decade, inspiring both copycats like Christina Aguilera and Jessica Simpson and mall punk antagonists like Avril Lavigne and Ashlee Simpson. Or how innovations in technology led to the rise of EDM as Rihanna experimented with sound while Ke$ha and Katy Perry embraced the “party anthem.”

Along the way, Princiotti explores how celebrity evolved alongside the changes in media from the tabloid days à la Lindsay Lohan to MySpace, Instagram and how Taylor created one of the largest, most dedicated fandoms the world has ever seen.

The ultimate love letter to pop music, Hit Girls celebrates the women who revolutionized the genre, inspired the next generation, and—in some cases—are burning brighter than ever.

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Published June 17, 2025

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Nora Princiotti

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 252 reviews
Profile Image for Sheila.
3,088 reviews123 followers
April 3, 2025
I received a free copy of, Hit Girls, by Nora Priniciotti, from the publisher and Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Britney, Avril, Taylor, Beyonce, Ashlee, Kelly, Lindsay, Paris, Lady Gaga, Rihanna, Carly Rae, and so many more stars of the 2000's are talked about in this book. This was an interesting read.
Profile Image for Amy.
2,642 reviews2,023 followers
June 6, 2025
3.5/5

From Beyoncé and Britney Spears to Kelly Clarkson, Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift, and more, Princiotti breaks down the major players and their impact with humor, heart, and a deep appreciation for the genre. While the book doesn’t necessarily unearth new information or shocking revelations, it’s not really trying to. Hit Girls thrives in its nostalgic glow, inviting readers to revisit the music, the moments, and the memories with fresh eyes.

I enjoyed the authors writing style, it feels like catching up with a pop savvy best friend; casual, funny, and full of enthusiasm. It’s as if you’re sitting on the couch together, reminiscing about middle school dances, CD booklets, and the MTV Video Music Awards. The tone is light, fun, and totally bingeable, perfect for anyone who wants a joyful, slightly sparkly break from heavier reads.

Hit Girls might not offer groundbreaking insight, but it doesn’t need to. It’s a celebration, not a thesis, and for fans of 2000s pop, it hits all the right notes.
Profile Image for Taylor Monson.
434 reviews
August 2, 2025
I LOVE pop culture and am chronically online. To know me is to understand that Britney and her lore is a core part of my being (my husband mentioned this in our wedding vows). If you also spent most of your time curating your MySpace page and currently make playlists with names like “songs to emphasize with your hands” and “the course of music as we know it changed” (real playlists I have made) then this book is probably also for you.

Also, the author keeps her foot on the neck of my number one enemy, J*stin T*mberlake and I appreciated that.

Thank you to Olivia, my fellow pop girly, for the incredible rec!
Profile Image for Paige.
625 reviews17 followers
June 23, 2025
A nostalgic, very fun trip down the lane of early 2000s pop stardom from a host of the excellent podcast, Every Single Album.
Profile Image for kory..
1,266 reviews130 followers
August 26, 2025
i had high hopes for this because finally the millennial author of a pop culture book is my age! but boy was this disappointing. the high point was eminem being called “mr. shady” and the low point was the avril lavigne disrespect.

aside from my very strong feelings about how princiotti spoke about avril lavigne (which i will get into, in depth), my biggest problem with this book was the lack of focus and cohesion. each chapter felt like standalone essays that weren’t fully fleshed out and were then pieced together to create a book without a clear throughline or connecting narrative beyond having to do with popstars in the 2000s. i was never really clear what the point was or if princiotti made it convincingly.

the book was all over the place regarding timeline and chosen popstars. while princiotti branded this book as being about the first decade of the 2000s, or “aughts,” it actually covered more than a decade: 1998-2013. why? because princiotti wanted to include certain popstars, such as britney’s beginnings, katy perry’s teenage dream, kesha, and carly rae jepsen’s “call me maybe” (for some reason). i mean, if you’re talking popstars into the 2010s, how can you not talk about miley cyrus? ariana grande? demi lovato?

princiotti’s selection is at times spot on (britney spears, taylor swift, christina aguilera, avril lavigne, ashlee simpson, beyonce, rihanna, kelly clarkson) and at times confusing in how little some were discussed (mandy moore, jennifer lopez, jessica simpson, lady gaga, katy perry, and kesha; the last three were crammed into the same chapter) and who was omitted entirely (pink, gwen stefani, vanessa carlton, michelle branch, shakira, nelly furtado, hilary duff, miley cyrus, demi lovato, and selena gomez).

given that princiotti would say things like “this artist followed in that artist’s footsteps” and “this artist paved the way for that artist,” i wish she had taken more time to explore the impact and influence these popstars had on one another. princiotti would say things like “gaga set the mold” that “other popstars followed,” immediately bringing to mind the popstars who did it before lady gaga. the popstars of the 2000s didn’t spring up from nothing, and the popstars that came after them weren’t born solely from them.

now, in defense of avril lavigne

it’s unfair and mean for princiotti to repeatedly question avril lavigne as a songwriter, as if unable to accept that avril was indeed more a writer than her peers at the time. from the first comment about avril being described as a songwriter “despite not writing her songs on her own” (as if she had ghostwriters, not known and credited co-writers; which doesn’t make her any less of a songwriter), to saying avril was “involved in her own songwriting process” while britney spears “really wasn’t for her first two albums” (downplaying avril’s writing by stressing she was merely involved and overselling britney’s writing by implying she had greater involvement later in her career).

let’s compare, since the author felt the need to denigrate avril as a songwriter in order to protect popstars (mainly just britney) who didn’t prioritize writing from implications of...not prioritizing writing. in 2002, avril had 1 album and all 14 writing credits, whereas jessica simpson and mandy moore had 2 albums and 1 credit each, britney had 3 albums and 7 credits, christina aguilera had 4 albums and 17 credits, jennifer lopez had 3 albums and 22 credits, pink had 2 albums and 22 credits, and destiny’s chid had 4 albums and 31 credits.

to really highlight the difference: avril has 103/103 writing credits (2002-2025) and is sole writer on 16 songs, whereas britney has 51/155 writing credits (1998-2023), and is sole writer on 1 song. (lindsay lohan, hilary duff, mandy moore, and jennifer lopez have writing credits on less than half of the songs they’ve released and jessica simpson, destiny’s child, kelly clarkson, pink, mariah carey, nelly furtado, and christina aguilera have writing credits on more than half but less than all of the songs they’ve released. and like avril, spice girls and ashlee simpson have writing credits on all their released songs.)

the author took it further: “neither of them was the type of songwriter to sit down at the piano and come away with a whole new composition. lavigne might have been compared to artists like vanessa carlton and michelle branch, who were their own primary songwriters, but her actual process was somewhere in the middle, if not closer to the spearsian end of things.” both vanessa and michelle utilize co-writers, just like avril. what’s more is that lauren christy (co-writer on avril’s first album) said her and avril wrote “i’m with you” at the piano and avril said “i sat at the piano and wrote my life” about her sixth album.

princiotti used lauren once saying she wrote the songs and avril would sometimes “change a lyric here and there” to push the narrative that avril wasn’t the songwriting she claimed to be. however, avril said her and lauren “did the lyrics together.” which is an account lauren herself has repeated several times over the years. i think that one single interview that princiotti took as irreputable proof that avril wasn’t a songwriter like that was the result of some heat of the moment, bitter feelings about avril maybe not always mentioning lauren when discussing the writing of the album (again, lauren worked on a few songs, not the entire album) or the media not always acknowledging her while praising avril’s writing, because lauren has repeated over the years that she worked with avril on those songs, wrote them with her, not for her.

lauren’s instagram is filled with stories about writing with avril and attending avril’s shows and showing nothing but support. other matrix member, scott spock, said the collaboration was equal, with avril contributing lyrics and melodies; l.a. reid said avril’s songwriting was what sold him on her as an artist; avril has spoken about refusing to sing songs written by other artists pitched to her by her label; avril played songs she had already written for the matrix when she first met them; avril has said she writes so many songs for an album that she could drop double albums with them.

princiotti gave other artists credit for their writing, even while downplaying avril’s. she noted that kelly clarkson co-wrote on every song on my december after being upset about not getting input on “since u been gone.” she noted lady gaga’s songwriting deal and listed off other artists’ songs she has writing credits on. she’s also just inconsistent about when she notes someone wrote a song or co-wrote a song. she said kara dioguardi wrote “ain’t no other man” and “rich girl,” despite there being several writers on it, including christina and gwen, respectively. she said john shanks and kara “packed” ashleee’s debut album “full” of emo lyrics, with no mention that ashlee is credited as a writer on all of those songs and even referred to ashlee as “positioning herself” as a songwriter.

the chapter was just unnecessarily critical and is negative in tone in a way the others aren’t. when she wasn’t saying avril didn’t write, she was saying when she did it wasn’t good. she talked about how avril’s second album didn’t do as well, her third album was dumb and empty, her career got “pretty weird,” and she “decline in popularity.” she also made sure to thoroughly detail avril’s teenage “not like other girls” attitude (which most teen girls have at one point or another).

princiotti made no mention of avril’s 2022 album love sux (pop punk excellence), which avril said was the “album she wanted to make her whole career.” it is avril’s “highest rated album of her career to date” according to metacritic: in the u.s. it debuted at #9 on billboard 200 (her 6th top-ten album, out of 7 albums) and #2 on top rock albums and top alternative albums charts, was the second best-selling album of that week, and went to #2 on billboard top album sales chart. princiotti basically portrayed avril’s career as inauthentic (claiming to be a writer when she wasn’t) and going downhill immediately after her first album.

but don’t worry, she spent plenty of time explaining the clone conspiracy.

other things that bothered me

princiotti used the term “male gaze” in a way that annoys me, as it disregards that it’s a term used in film critique about women being portrayed through the lens of men, whether it’s the male protagonist, director, writer, or viewer. it’s not supposed to be weaponized against real women expressing themselves, and it also does not refer to anything that a man might find attractive.

princiotti stated early lady gaga did “a lot of stuff that subverted the male gaze,” which carries the implication that “the male gaze” is something real women adhere to or subvert depending on how they express themselves. she argued that a lot of the “party girl aesthetic” was “quite blatantly about appealing to men,” which is confusing, because i don’t see the party aesthetics of early kesha or tove lo and think, “ah yes, the purpose of this is to arouse men.” nothing about it lines up with heterosexual men traditionally find attractive. furthermore, princiotti never explained how these artists “subverted” or “appealed” to the male gaze, just stated that they did.

most confusingly, princiotti insisted that katy perry’s “california gurls” wasn’t “made for men to ogle” because “the dream of the song is to be [a california gurl], not to have one,” and that the intent “wasn’t to be sexy, it was just about having fun.” (the latter is more accurate to say about the party girl aesthetic, but whatever.) however! i vehemently disagree with the assertion that “california gurls” had nothing to do with being sexy or wanting a california gurl. katy sings about boys wanting them and to boys about how desirable they are, snoop raps about desiring them, and the music video is filled with sexual imagery. the song and video are objectively about how the boys all want an uber desirable california gurl. “the dream is to be one, not have one” is blatantly false.

princiotti came off at times as incredibly judgmental. she said ashlee simpson “didn’t beat the charges that she was a phony” because she told people to love their bodies and then got a nose job, without zero mention of making changes to your body not being incongruous with body positivity. she described pop music of 2006-2007 as a “flop,” “boring,” and “deeply, deeply annoying,” simply because she didn’t care for the music of snow patrol, daniel powter, james blunt, and whatever music soundtracked one tree hill and medical dramas. it was all very hypocritical (and unnecessary).

she is also one of those people who are unfairly hard on “i kissed a girl.” she said it was “clumsy,” “cringey,” “questionable,” “sleazy,” and depicting intimacy between women as “pure titillation that only happens with the express purpose of getting guys really turned on.” i wrote an entire article on how “bashing ‘i kissed a girl’ isn’t queer activism” so i don’t need to say anything more than princiotti was very, very wrong in her take.

princiotti kept mentioning how we have moved on from strict genre categories, but while it’s all well and good that the likes of chappell roan can move freely between pop, rock, and country without fuss, have we forgotten the gatekeeping and outrage (and plain racism) over black artists like lil nas x and beyonce doing country music?
Profile Image for CatReader.
1,030 reviews177 followers
August 5, 2025
Nora Princiotti (b. 1994) is an American pop culture writer whose interests include the '00s female-fronted music of her childhood, explored in her 2025 book Hit Girls. As it happens, the '00s are also my favorite decade of music, as they spanned my formative music years from high school to college to early grad school, and I've really appreciated the recent popularity of books about this underlooked (in my opinion) decade in pop culture.

Princiotti, who would have been aged 6-16 in the '00s (vs. 13-23 for me), writes about this decade of music from her own childhood and middle school recollections, as well as from research she's done using both contemporary and retrospective sources, including from some music producers and writers of that era (though less so from artists themselves). I generally agree with how she divided the decade of pop music:

- pure bubblegum pop in the early '00s (notable artists she covers here include Britney Spears first album Christina Aguilera, Jessica Simpson, Mandy Moore, Jennifer Lopez)
- the rise of pop/rock in the early/mid '00s, and the image battles for authenticity vs. manufactured artists (Avril Lavigne, Ashlee Simpson - "Autobiography...a 43 minute album by a woman with middling interest in music and the best producers money could buy that happens to be really, really good" - very true for me, except that last part - I was not a fan of Ashlee Simpson then, and still am not now; I did appreciate all the brief shoutouts to the non-US-based pop/rock artists I closely followed here, though, like The Veronicas, Lillix, Fefe Dobson, etc.)
- the brief popularity of pop/R&B in the mid '00s (Beyoncé)
- electropop/EDM-influenced pop in the mid/late '00s (Rihanna's Good Girl Gone Bad era; Britney's seminal Blackout era, Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton's short-lived musical careers)
- the end of the decade - Gaga's debut, Katy Perry, Ke$ha

Overall, the only classification I don't really buy is Kelly Clarkson as an exemplification of how the indie/hipster sound went mainstream (based largely on the argument that Since U Been Gone was loosely adapted from the Yeah Yeah Yeah's Maps) -- in my opinion, Kelly Clarkson's '00s output was decidedly pop/rock, leaning heavier toward pop when Clive Davis was primarily steering the ship (Breakaway, All I Ever Wanted) and more toward rock when Clarkson had more creative control (My December).

I was impressed by the depth of Princiotti's knowledge and research here, especially as she was quite young during the '00s and probably doesn't associate certain songs with cultural zeitgeists like those of us who were teens or young adults during that decade. That being said, some notable omissions in my opinion include Hilary Duff (especially as Princiotti opens the book reminiscing about how Duff's debut Metamorphosis was the first album she ever bought!), Pink, Michelle Branch, Vanessa Carlton, Bonnie McKee (moreso as a songwriter than an artist in her own right, though she's done both), Liz Phair's pop era, the late '00s Disney girls (Miley Cyrus, Demi Lovato, Selena Gomez), American Idol artists beyond Kelly Clarkson, and girl groups/girl-fronted bands (PCD, Diddy's girl groups like Dream and Danity Kane, Play, etc., as well as bands like Paramore that get brief mentions but not much feature). Robyn is really the only non-US artist to get more than a passing mention, though so much of my American-teen-chronically-online '00s listens went to British pop artists of the '00s, like Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Lily Allen, and girl groups like Atomic Kitten, Sugababes, Girls Aloud (Xenomania really was the cutting edge years before similar sounds hit the US), The Saturdays, and similar acts -- and this was due to the accessibility of these songs by P2P file sharing (which Princiotti doesn't mention) and internet forum subculture. I would have omitted Taylor Swift from the discussion (she got quite a lengthy inclusion) since her mainstream pop crossover wasn't really until the '10s, though clearly Princiotti is a big fan. That being said, this project has huge scope, so I'm sure there were parts that were cut to tighten the scope.

Princiotti pegs the end of the '00s music era to the early '10s, with pure pop earwormer Carly Rae Jepsen providing some last gasps before Lorde debuted. In my opinion, by the time Gaga and her brand of bizarrely choreographed artistic pop arrived on the scene in the late '00s, music fundamentally sounded different (read: worse) to my ears, so I spent more time shuffling my old playlists than actively seeking out new music (though this could also be because I was approaching my mid-20s and in a very different stage of life with much less free time than where I'd been a decade prior).

This was a fun, quick listen that those of us who grew up in this era, or are fans of pop music in general. I still unironically enjoy this decade of music for its many juxtapositions and iterations, and the last decade where collecting CDs and/or downloading music was really a thing before the internet, social media, and streaming platforms changed how society interacted with music.

Further reading: the '00s
Toxic: Women, Fame, and the Tabloid 2000s by Sarah Ditum
Girl on Girl: How Pop Culture Turned a Generation of Women Against Themselves by Sophie Gilbert
One in a Millennial: On Friendship, Feelings, Fangirls, and Fitting In by Kate Kennedy
Y2K: How the 2000s Became Everything by Colette Shade

Further reading: music
This Is What It Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You by Susan Rogers and Ogi Ogas
The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory by John Seabrook (referenced several times in this book)
Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist by Liz Pelly

My statistics:
Book 237 for 2025
Book 2163 cumulatively
Profile Image for Kelsey O.
59 reviews3 followers
December 5, 2025
I got this book to support Nora, who (alongside Nathan) has taught me so much over the years about music that has contextualized and enriched my listening habits. This book furthered my education with an entertaining, subject-appropriate writing style and horrific reminders of my childhood culture with new meaning against a backdrop I wasn’t fully aware of at the time. As someone who loves pop music and the cultural zeitgeist, this book was written for me. Thanks, Nora!
Profile Image for Rachel.
435 reviews19 followers
April 23, 2025
As a millennial pop girlie, this was the book for me. Such a fun read! I'm a HUGE fan of Nora Princiotti from her podcast Every Single Album that she co-hosts with Nathan Hubbard, and I was ecstatic to be among the first to read this. Princiotti revisits the mega female pop stars of the 2000s, devoting a chapter to each (including Britney Spears, early Beyoncé, Kelly Clarkson, Avril Lavigne, Lady Gaga, early Taylor Swift — of course! - and more). While the pop stars and the big hits weren't new to me, this was a terrific exercise in nostalgia. I also loved learning more about the cultural context of these artists and songs. At the time, I wasn't thinking about cultural or historical context, of course; my childhood and adolescent self was just enjoying the bops. Princiotti finds a great balance between well-researched, thoughtful commentary and infusing her deep connection to the music. Her unique voice so clearly comes through, and because of the pod, I could literally "hear" her voice in my head as I read some of this.

Thank you to Netgalley and Ballantine Books for giving me a complimentary digital ARC in exchange for my honest review. Also thanks to Nora Princiotti — you rock! Hit Girls releases June 17, 2025.
Profile Image for Lyon.Brit.andthebookshelf.
865 reviews43 followers
July 10, 2025
Book Report: Hit Girls: Britney, Taylor, Beyoncé, and the Women Who Built Pop's Shiniest Decade

At First Glance: A lineup of ladies from my bring up…say less!

The Jist: An entertaining and deeply nostalgic dive into how female pop stars broke through the music industry in the 2000s and altered the cultural landscape forever.

My Thoughts: Anytime there is a new book released that makes me reminisce about sparkly butterfly clips or whether I should layer another lace tank top over the two I’m wearing, gets immediately added to my TBR. This was a pure pleasure read (I wasn’t given a copy) My girl Libby (library app) hooked me up on release day and I’m forever grateful. When I first started listening I knew it would be a good one so I savored this walk down memory lane alongside author Nora Princiotti who does a fantastic job narrating. As she should, she is the co host of Every Single Album podcast which I haven’t listened to yet but now is on my podcast rotation. Any who… if your a fan of all things early 2000s this is good look at not only what we were listening to but how these pop stars paved the way for the next generation. If that doesn’t catch your fancy there is an incredible chapter about Mother (Taylor Swift) with fun bits I haven’t heard before.

My Question for Nora: If you could host a dinner party with three women from music history (dead or alive), who’s getting the invite?

Follow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Lyon.brit.A...
Profile Image for Alex Franklin.
114 reviews4 followers
June 30, 2025
Many thanks to @meggywalsh for recommending the book that got me out of my reading slump. Everything in the world is terrible. Basking in the sugary pop songs from my girlhood felt great. Would recommend to any fan of pop music, but especially to fellow millennials. Its a true joy to revisit the albums many of us (often secretly) loved with our full hearts. Grateful to have evolved into a time where the musical interests of women and girls are finally taken seriously. Many thanks to the ladies that painfully paved that way for us all. Dare I say… Ashlee Simspon walked so Olivia Rodrigo could run?
Profile Image for Rosie Dunn.
2 reviews7 followers
July 22, 2025
This was so entertaining and informative!! I was born in 2000 and am a massive fan of pop music and Nora’s other work! I learned a lot- some of the music covered was slightly before my time because Nora is 6 years older than me (I think) but as a pop music lover now it was so interesting to learn about!! I loved listening to the audiobook because Nora narrates it. If you listen to Every Single Album you’ll love this! 💗
Profile Image for Sam Wescott.
1,320 reviews47 followers
July 20, 2025
That was fun! It was a surprisingly short book for one that covered a pretty wide span of time (roughly 1995 to 2010/2015 ish) and a pretty wide range of topics (music genre, pop politics, celebrity, fandom trends, production etc) even if she did stay focused on huge female pop stars. Because of this speedy pace, it’s definitely more of an overview and cultural history than a deeply focused analysis and I came away with more fun facts than particularly engaging insight. But it was a fun ride and I actually learned a lot more about music styles and genre influence than I expected!

The tone of the writing was just the tiniest hair more chatty and colloquial than I tend to like in my non-fiction, but the narration was good (which makes sense since the author is a podcast host). The songs mentioned were almost universally ones I knew and the internal soundtrack that accompanied my reading experience was pretty impossible to ignore. I’m surprised there doesn’t seem to be an official companion playlist on Spotify with all the songs mentioned in order.

I was honestly shocked at the last chapter though when the author used Carly Rae Jepson as an example of someone who missed the peak pop wave, as she is the only artist mentioned whose music I’ve intentionally sought out and enjoyed?? EMOTION was an almost universally beloved album among my peer group and I thought it was a notable hit. Finding out that that’s not how the author categorizes her has left me wondering if the music listening experience has become siloed and individual that a book like this will even be possible in the future. It was a weird little jarring moment to end the book on, haha.

But, overall, I enjoyed this more than I expected as someone who mostly listened to Christian music until college and only knew these songs through sleepovers with less religious friends and kidzbop commercials. As an apostate in her 30’s, I still don’t really listen to Top 40 type music, but this overview was very helpful contextualizing all the stuff I picked up late. A quick and interesting read!
Profile Image for Meredith  Semrad.
103 reviews
August 8, 2025
I really enjoy Nora’s work on the Every Single Album podcast, but this book didn’t feel quite as polished. At times the information felt a bit scattered, making it harder to follow the throughline. That said, I loved revisiting so many pop girl moments. It’s such a memorable music era for me, and that nostalgia made it fun. While it wasn’t as sharp or cohesive as I’d hoped, it was still an enjoyable trip down memory lane with new information thrown in!
Profile Image for Jane Townsend.
31 reviews
August 22, 2025
I really enjoyed all the nostalgia in this book and learning more about some events I vaguely remember. I did get caught up in a lot of the technical jargon and had to skim some of it.
47 reviews
June 24, 2025
I’ve been a loyal listener to Every Single Album since before Fearless TV, so I’ve listened to a LOT of Nora talking about pop music. She’s just as funny in writing as she is on the pod, but I was pleasantly surprised by how detailed and well researched this book was as well. It’s a really well done history of music (and not just fangirling over all of these songs, though there’s enough of that to keep you entertained). Here’s hoping we get a followup for the 2010s!
Profile Image for Laura Silvey.
223 reviews12 followers
July 17, 2025
NO. NOTES.
This book far exceeded my expectations. Written with a glitter gel pen, infused with cultural nostalgia and fangirl codes, and structured as mini essays on some of the most powerful icons of the 2000s, this book was so FUN. But at the same time, Nora was serious, researched, and intentional in her writing. She clearly studied this decade and had a lot of insightful conclusions on the cause and effect of different events within pop culture. She also touches on racism and feminism without getting preachy (a rare gem!). If you listen to any pop culture podcast, this book is for you. And if you do read this, you must then listen to her podcast, Every Single Album.
Profile Image for Anna.
113 reviews14 followers
September 10, 2025
super fun listen for the girly pops!!
Profile Image for Meghan Walsh.
635 reviews13 followers
June 23, 2025
I have had this book earmarked from the moment Nora announced it. I love Nora and Nathan on the Every Single Album podcast, and I had little doubt that I would love this book just as much. Reading and listening about your favorite music is fun, duh! This collection of chapters on the late 90s & early 00s pop girlies was a thrilling nostalgia ride back through my teen years. Because of Nora’s nods to certain songs, I honestly had my Spotify on while reading, in order to resave the pop classics I had forgotten….Lindsay Lohan’s Rumors, Mya’s Case of the Ex, to name a few…. This was a light but thoughtful rewind through modern female pop history, chronicling the major changes that specific stars made to the industry at large. It’s a compassionate look at the leaders who defined the pop genre then, and many of whom continue to do so now. But I’m equally glad DJ Earworm got some love here too!
Profile Image for Nancy.
537 reviews4 followers
September 22, 2025
A fun look at pop music in the 90s and 2000s through the lens of female artists. It is a light and easy read. While I might have wanted even more depth, especially more analysis on how ideals of womanhood reflected in the pop music through the years, I enjoyed every chapter and never found myself bored.

The author narrates the book and she was great. Her passion for music and the artists she writes about came through her narration.
Profile Image for Rachel Libke.
68 reviews
June 22, 2025
Perfect vacation read ✨ I felt constantly at war between the urge to stop and listen to a song discussed in the book and the urge to binge gleefully on to the next page, and that kind of push and pull is my favorite type of reading experience.
Profile Image for Sara Platt.
170 reviews1 follower
September 3, 2025
This is a book for pop culture / music nerds. I loved it.
Profile Image for Eleanor Mason.
17 reviews10 followers
July 13, 2025
Come for the nostalgia, stay for the really well-researched dive into pop history.
Profile Image for Renay Russell.
329 reviews2 followers
September 30, 2025
I really liked this - a good history of women in pop in the early 2000’s
Profile Image for Lea.
797 reviews5 followers
June 21, 2025
4.5. Audiobook #28 2025. Listened to this in one day. Loved the walk down memory lane, knowing what we know now.
Profile Image for Robin.
1 review1 follower
July 9, 2025
Basically the book version of my favorite throwback playlists. What more could you ask for?
Profile Image for Emily.
205 reviews14 followers
April 9, 2025
I’ll just get this out of the way: I loved this book. Like it will make my top books of the year sort of book. Thank you @netgalley for a copy in exchange for a review!

Nora Princiotti is one of my favorite podcasters. She hosts the podcast Every Single Album along with Nathan Hubbard which initially started out as a podcast taking a closer look at each of Taylor Swift’s albums. It has since evolved into a podcast that reviews and commentates on other artist’s latest pop music. Like her podcast, I found Hit Girls to be an informative, entertaining and nostalgic look at the evolution of pop music from 1998-2012 by focusing on the big playmakers who made it happen like Britney, Beyonce, and Avril Lavigne. The entire book is basically the order in which I grew my childhood CD collection.

While I came for Princiotti’s commentary, I stayed for the nostalgia. In today’s world, where the US is in constant turmoil, I found myself embracing the nostalgic escape this book offered and remembering simpler days like: Why was my …Baby One More Time CD baby pink and my friend from summer day camp’s Blue?! Or: “I finally figured out why I never pay attention to lyrics or realize 5 years later what a song is actually about! Lyrics from songs from critical periods of my young music listening years were nonsensical! (Looking at …Baby One More Time and I Want It That Way)

Pop music was not considered “real” music in the same way people try to other romance books as not “real” literature. Listening to pop music by female artists and boy bands always “othered” people who enjoyed listening to it. It wasn’t cool unless you were an 8 year old girl. As Princiotti puts it “Pop is a youthful genre, but the language used to describe it is often condescending…Fans are “teenyboppers,” artists “pop princesses,” and the music itself a “guilty pleasure.” What Princiotti accomplishes with this book is illustrating the work that it took for pop to be the respected genre that it is today and how it finally broke out the shadow of constantly being compared to rock music.

If you’re looking for a hit of nostalgia and a closer look at the modern history of pop music, look no further than Hit Girls. It’s an absolute gem. Pub day July 1, 2025.
Profile Image for Jenica.
1,460 reviews46 followers
June 8, 2025
I grew up on 90s-early 2000s Country music on the radio, before getting my first albums, Britney Spears, Backstreet Boys, N*Sync, Christina Aguilera. Britney Spears was my first solo artist concert, actually. I had been to a country music festival at the tender age of like seven or eight, but Britney Spears was the first person I got to see on stage performing with set pieces and the fancy lights. I loved it. I'm also a few years older than Princiotti, which meant that every cultural touchstone she mentioned was one that I remember equally as well. We have different songs that maybe form the basis of our obsession with various stars, but neither of us remember the first time we heard Taylor Swift and we're both sad about it because she rules large in both of our lives. But in saying all of that, what I loved about this book is that it's a real examination of the evolution of pop music and, more specifically, how pop music changed.

It's interesting too because I feel as though the thesis of this book is, at least in part, that we've lowered the strict genre guidelines in the last two decades, but then I think about Cowboy Carter and how much people resisted Beyoncé making a country album. But, as per usual, racism has a part to play. And that's not something Princiotti shies away from, although she's careful when she indicates if something is not within her wheelhouse to really cover. But in terms of pointing out the influence of R&B and hip hop on pop music? She covers it. In terms of talking about how the paparazzi were absolutely horrendous in the early 2000s, she makes interesting notes about how much easier it was for white celebrities to break through to be a "star" with paparazzi attention, whereas for Black artists it typically wasn't easy. And then there's Beyoncé.

Anyway, I'm pretty sure I'm just rambling through the various things that I really liked about this book, but I did enjoy it! Sometimes it felt a little more academic and dry than what you might expect, but also, I had the best time listening to the music of my tween and teen years while reading along. It was a blast. I would now like Princiotti to release an additional book covering the years of 2010-2020 and the evolution of pop music, which she does touch on in her concluding chapter. It's just that, as per usual, I'd like more.

Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for the e-ARC!
Profile Image for Michaela Henry.
100 reviews
July 30, 2025
Thank you Nora Princiotti, Ballentine Publishing, and NetGalley for the ARC!

4.5 stars rounded down

As someone who grew up in the early aughts, I have an interesting relationship with pop music. There's really nothing like playing Just Dance on the Wii while your parents argue about the 2008 financial crises (during which I asked for said Wii and every single Webkinz that hit the shelves). It was a time to let loose and party like there's no tomorrow- because there might not be a tomorrow. Then, it wasn't cool to like pop music and I made the switch over to the male-validation worthy indie and classic rock genres. And shit, I like those too! At the end of the day though, I can't quite shake my ass to The Shins. So forgive me, pop-loving women, for being a total croon. I'm gay and shaking my ass to Charlie XCX now if that's any consolation.

Now, as an adult, I can see this coming back with the rise of pop princesses like Chappell, Sabrina, Charlie, and Addison Rae. This time though- let's hope we don't torture them under the public's eagle eye of scrutiny. One thing I really liked about this book was that it emphasizes the often cruel way we treated these women who quite literally DEFINED pop music for what it is today.

It's interesting to reflect on where we were culturally at this time, and that's exactly what this book does. Princiotti is masterful at zooming in and out of discourse and the history that went on into producing these pop princesses of the aughts. Each chapter focuses on a cultural aspect of the era and a star that best represents these emerging trends. I didn't even mind the Taylor Swift chapter (yes, I did end up reading it) because it also discusses the rise of stan culture and the beginnings of being permanently online. Even though it was written by a clear Swiftie, she managed to make it interesting and somewhat neutral.

As I was reading, I kept thinking things like "I hope she mentions X,Y,Z..." and then she WOULD. Truly, I don't think any stone was left uncovered and the resulting book is a truly fascinating account of music history. I truly recommend anyone interested in the era pick this one up.
Profile Image for Caley.
400 reviews3 followers
Read
August 17, 2025
I preordered this book because pop music of the lasts 90s to 2009 is my thing! I do also love some fun songs from partying days up until 2013 but generally 2009 is my cut off point for nostalgic bops
I was hopeful that this would be similar to Toxic, where each star introduced a specific topic but it didn't really achieve that
The prologue started with mention of Hilary Duff who arguably deserved a chapter for paving the way for the Disney stars who followed. No chapter for Hilary Duff. No chapter for Christina Aguilera, Shakira, Adele, P!nk, Nicki Minaj who felt pretty massive at the time. I worked in high street fashion retail from 2004-2009, I could not avoid these artists (I didn't want to, the songs were fun!)
The book felt very fractured as if it wasn't sure what point it wanted to make. I think it was a great concept but poorly executed. At one point there was a chapter about how much the author loved Taylor Swift. Attempts were made to make this chapter about how fandoms use social media but it just didn't work. At the end the author discussed how culturally the 2000s didn't end until 2012/13 but the ending was so rushed that the book really could have left this out. It felt an odd choice to discuss the new upcoming pop girlies because the book missed a whole decade out. To discuss pop music of 2000-2012/13 then skip to 2023 feels like a wild choice
I think it is pretty obvious that the author favoured some stars over others. The stars with the highest page count were; Britney (the undisputed queen of 2000s pop) with a 25 page chapter, Avril Lavigne and Taylor Swift both with 23 page chapters. Were these three artists of close enough cultural impact in the 2000s to deserve a similar page count? I'd say no. Yet Beyoncé got a 9 page chapter and Lady Gaga 11.
I need to do better at researching who authors are before I buy nostalgic non fiction because I keep getting burned. I just want fun trips down memory lane
Profile Image for Austin.
70 reviews5 followers
July 22, 2025
Fun, well-written read that gave me so much nostalgia for the fondest musical memories I have. As a music and pop culture loving millennial, this was pretty enjoyable.

I really enjoy Nora’s commentary on Every Single Album and I think the two of us being the exact same age and grade really helped me connect with the tone and referenced zeitgeists. Overall I think the thesis of the book felt like an amorphous moving target. It wasn’t quite clear why these particular pop stars were selected and how, if at all, she saw their impacts as interacting phenomena or individual threads occurring within a similar time frame. The Gaga chapter felt particularly unorganized, with Katy getting squeezed in more as a bit of an afterthought.

There was also a need for more justification and setup for the selection of Britney, Taylor, Béy, Avril, Rihanna, Ashlee, Kelly, and Hilary as focal points. At the risk of sounding like an aggrieved stan, the lack of setup left me wondering why other influential mega stars during this period, such as Gwen and P!nk, didn’t make the cut for a featured chapter. I think the publishing pressure to keep this book short probably hindered what could’ve been a stronger version with 100 more pages or so.

Overall very fun and I’m nitpicking what is a lighthearted and thoughtful reflection on the impact of female pop in the ‘00s. The evolution of pop music into the forefront of culture, its complicated relationship with rock and hip hop, and the discussion of poptimism/rockism were the strongest parts of the book.
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