The adventures of Princess Mia—which have sold millions of copies and graced the screen in Disney blockbusters—aren't Meg Cabot's only successful series. The queen of teens also appeals to older audiences, with hilarious and suspenseful plots. Like the adventures of Heather Wells, introduced to Brazilian audiences in "Size 42 Isn't Fat." Heather is a pop singer who has reached an undesirable point in her artistic career: rock bottom. No record label is interested in her music, her father is behind bars, and her mother fled to Buenos Aires with all her money. Her only job left is as a college inspector. In "Size Doesn't Matter," Heather returns and flexes her detective skills. Life seems to be settling down for Heather. Her father is finally moving out of the apartment she shares with Cooper, a mix of boss, landlord, and gorgeous ex-brother-in-law; She's got a boyfriend who wants to help her lose weight, and things are, as always, weird at her job as a housing inspector at New York University. The not-so-nice Dr. Owen Broucho is Heather Wells's third boss in less than a year. But now Heather no longer has to worry about his bad mood: he turned up dead. What she has to do is use her exceptional investigative skills if she wants to clear Sebastian Blumenthal, student leader and prime suspect in the murder, of a seemingly false accusation. While trying to figure out what Ted, her new boyfriend, has that's so important to ask, "Size Doesn't Matter" is the third volume in the Heather Wells series. A detective novel with a feminine twist and plenty of confusion.