A review by lenorayoder
The Quarantine Princess Diaries by Meg Cabot

2.0

At this point Mia is in her 30s (the timeline of these books is somewhat fantastical), and while we’re told she’s developed in her career, the focus of the books is her personal life and it’s frustrating that between her mid-twenties and early thirties there’s been very little development. In fact, she appears to be about as emotionally mature as she was at the end of high school/the tenth book. Like seriously, kick your awful, covid-carrying grandmother out of YOUR castle to one of her MANY OTHER properties, stop letting her and everyone else walk all over you. And communicate with your husband! Of course people and characters have flaws, but they also grow and change over time, and Mia’s personal life is incredibly stagnant over these last couple books.