Oh boy this was a doozy to get through. As always me reviews are based solely on enjoyment, and so are my ratings. This review WILL have spoilers.
To start with, for 80% of the book I was sure I was going to rate it 2 stars. Which is a low rating for this series, I've rated at least one of these books 5 stars. However the ending, and the fact that Mia actually had to deal with consequences for once in her life, made me bump the rating up to 3 stars. And my love for JP. Let's get into it.
The Summary:
Mia is starting her junior years of high school, and dealing with three things, chiefly the fact that Michael is moving to Japan to work on robotics that would revolutionize the medical field - and he'll be there for up to a year. In an effort to keep him in New York, Mia decides to give Michael her virginity, which just goes all wrong. The other things are mostly subplots, Lilly annoys her because she wants Mia to run for President as a puppet leader again and Mia doesn't want to. There's also the matter of JP having a huge crush on her and letting her get away with things, while she alienates the rest of her friends during his Michael induced temper tantrums.
If you can't tell, I wasn't Mia's biggest fan during this read.
The Good:
- Mia deals with real consequences for the first time! Normally when things happen to her, they seem unjustified and everyone agrees with her in the end that it's not fair. In this book Mia has consequences, losing Michael and Lilly, and even Mia admits that she deserves to lose Michael.
- JP. He does bad things, i.e dating Lilly while liking Mia, but he's really kind to Mia and sort of her rock throughout this. In general JP has taken Michaels place as the sympathetic and likeable love interest, and his Timothee Chalamet looking ass is the love of my life.
- The end plot of Mia's dad always loving her mom. It was so sweet it brought me to tears, and was a real moment of connection between him and Mia, which isn't something we get often.
The Bad:
- So many things. I can't rant about it all in this section, but there were so many problems.
- MIA. She continuously drives me crazy in these books, but this one really took the cake. She's self centered, mean to all her friends and Michael, whom she claims to love, and just down right illogical. She went from being a sort of ditsy but well meaning Princess in training in the first book, to someone who actively does damage because she simply can't comprehend that her actions have consequences.
- Most of the people in Mia's life. I don't really know how to classify this, but people in Mia's life either were letting her do whatever she wants, or just being mean to her. Of course this is all from Mia's POV, so it's not objective, but oh my gosh Mia had no one to check her that she would actually listen to.
- The fact that Mia is using sex like this, when sex so clearly makes her super uncomfortable. I know, she can change her mind, but she really doesn't. To her, sex is not something pleasurable for women, it's a tool, something to use and 'give' to someone. It's just a super toxic mentality to write about in a book series for young girls. You can have Mia be weary of sex without her being like this? And I don't understand why Michael, a very intelligent young man, wasn't more offended that Mia thinks him so simple that sex would change his mind. He puts up a mild front of offence, but then they start fighting about Judith so it doesn't really get very much word count.
The Strange:
- The Star Wars references have been replaced by LOTR references. I can only assume that Meg Cabot watched Revenge of the Sith and decided she didn't want Mia comparing her and Michael to Padme and Anakin anymore, so no more Star Wars references.
- Her grandmere is normally actively a problem, but in this one she's just funny, like saying that bourbon fixes all problems when Mia is crying about Michael.
- Perin? I don't know how to explain it but she is a lesbian, I swear to god, and it's never talked about, but there's this subtext. Give Perin more page time.
- The entire subplot / thread about Mia trying to find out if Lilly and JP had sex over the summer. It was just weird and didn't fit, and she shouldn't care if she doesn't like JP
Overall this book frustrated me, which is more and more becoming the case with these books. Genuinely, I took a several day break in the middle of a sentence (since I'm listening on audiobook) because Mia was making me so mad with her choices, and I knew what was coming and that I wouldn't like it. In the end I gave my phone to my sibling, connected bluetooth headphones and told her she wasn't allowed to pause it or let me take them off until the book was over. Because I avoid things, and boy did I want to avoid Mia's mistakes.
I liked that Mia faced consequences and in the end came to her senses. But that should have been the act 2 climax. I need more resolution, not just between her and Michael, but also Lilly and JP. A lot of this book just felt like filler, like Meg Cabot knew the plot points but didn't know how to fill them in in an interesting way. Which sucks so much to say about a book I so badly wanted to like.
It's gotten to the point where no more audibooks are available to me, and I have to decide if pursuing the books physically is worth it. They will take much more time to read, and with my frustration with Mia, and the messages that Meg Cabot is baking into her books - I just don't know if it's worth it.