The Princess and the Fangirl by Ashley Poston

The Princess and the Fangirl (Once Upon a Con, #2)

by Ashley Poston

Movie star Jessica Stone can t go up onstage at another con and pretend to love Starfield anymore except that she s contractually obligated. She never dreamed she d be playing Princess Amara for life, but people love Princess Amara, and for better or worse, Princess Amara has Jessica Stone s face. But. it turns out, so does someone else. Imogen Weatherby is just another Starfield fan hitting up ExcelsiCon except that she happens to look an awful lot like Jessica Stone (and no, you re not the first one to point it out). When Jess spots Imogen, she has a brilliant idea: swap places. Jessica can live her life out of the spotlight while Imogen pretends to be her on the rest of the con circuit, and Imogen can ditch her crappy barista job and finally get to see something beyond her hometown. But Jess doesn t anticipate actually liking Imogen s life or Imogen s gorgeous best friend, Hana, who might just be the person Jess needs to forget about her ex. And Imogen loves being Jess Stone and might even love this super talented artist, Tamaki, who she keeps bumping into. Except Tamaki thinks she s Jessica Stone. When an obsessive fan finds out the truth and threatens to expose Jess for the fake geek girl she is, it will take both Jess and Imogen to stand up for the truth: That there is no such thing as a fake geek girl. That if you are a fan, then you are accepted. And that even if you aren t a fan, you are worthy. That you are not invisible. That what you love matters. From the acclaimed author of Geekerella, this geeky spin on The Prince and the Pauper is a perfect story for geek girls of every fandom.

Reviewed by Kat @ Novels & Waffles on

3 of 5 stars

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"Sometimes the best heroes are the ones in your head—but that doesn’t make them any less real."

Things I Liked:

✑ The main characters were very relatable (anxious + worried about never being enough)
✑ So much geeky fun!!!! This book is a love letter to fangirls everywhere and I LIVED for all of the pop culture references
✑ The writing style was distinctive and absolutely hilarious
✑ Presents a powerful message about the dual nature of social media and the internet – it can bring people together, but also tear us apart
✑ Loved the theme of being enough

Things I Liked... Less:

✑ A predictable, cliché plotline

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 5 May, 2019: Finished reading
  • 5 May, 2019: Reviewed