Tess Sharpe ([info]sharpegirl) wrote,
@ 2009-01-06 18:27:00
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Current location:Office
Current mood: happy
Current music:Steve Earle
Entry tags:books, reading, tributes

The Princess Diaries--a thank you.
Ten or so years ago, I picked up a bright pink book in the bookstore. It wasn't the kind of thing I normally would pick up--at 12 I was vehemently opposed to the color pink just for the sake of it. But I dunno, there was something about it that made me buy it.

I was awkward as 12. Hell, I was awkward through all my teen years, and I still have my many moments at 22. I spent a lot of time writing in notebooks and ignoring other people (still do, but I've gotten better about apologizing for it). I was gawky and unsure of myself and generally said the wrong thing at the wrong time and ended up agonizing over my mistakes for days. I felt like a freak.

I'm telling everyone this because when I say Meg Cabot's Princess Diaries books changed my life as well as my writing, I want to be clear that I am totally 100% serious.

I just finished Forever Princess, the last book in the series, and I fully admit that I cried through the last 100 pages. For me, this is an end of an era, practically the end of my teenagerdom in my mind. This is the finish of the books that I have faithfully read for 10 years, books I have read over and over again when I've had a bad day or a bad date or a bad anything at all. These are the books that, as a teenager, made me feel a little less freakish and awkward. Mia was like a friend--someone I could relate to on so many levels. I loved her adventures and I loved the way she saw the world, because it was so much like the way I saw it as a teen.

I bought the first book when it just came out--before the movie, before it the best-sellers lists. I loved it so much that I instantly started tracking down anything else that Meg Cabot had written (her historical romances are FAB). I also wrote Meg herself a letter and she ended up doing an interview for my teen e-zine, unladylike. She signed books for us and was such a wonderful, nice author and that's always really stuck with me.

What also has stuck with me is my sheer admiration for Meg Cabot as an author and a person. Not only is she wildly successful, but she has written several books and donated the proceeds to various charities. She's a wonderful, imaginative writer whose ability to cross over genres I envy.

Thank you, Meg, for letting all of us share Mia's world. The awkward 12 year old girl inside me thanks you from the bottom of my heart. You made my teenaged years much easier and your books inspired me to write YA. They made me think outside the children's book box--to think about characters who were going through real things and fantastical things at the same time. Characters who were like real teenagers.

I'm grateful, because I'm not sure I'd be here writing this if I hadn't, by chance, relinquished my hatred for the color pink and picked up that book 10 years ago.




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[info]miss_shortskirt
2009-01-07 04:14 am UTC (link)
you are too cute :-)
i fell off the princess diaries wagon
but i like meg cabot more than i admit to myself
alice mckinley is my mia. when that series ends, i'll be in tears, fo sho

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