karigan commented on moss-mylk's review of The Rose Bargain
This was not a book I would call objectively good. I knew I was coming into this for a fun time over anything else. I really had to suspend my disbelief and just roll with it (or at least just roll my eyes).
Things I did not like / I think were weak:
However, this was clearly fun enough that I couldnāt stop reading at several points, and I am looking forward to the sequel. Things I loved or liked:
karigan commented on a post
karigan commented on robyn00's review of The Spirit Bares Its Teeth
Ah yes. The autistic urge to pop out oneās eyes with a spoon. Relatable?
Post from the Alchemy of Secrets forum
Iām loving the switch between second and third person POV. Itās making for such an intriguing story, especially since Hollandās chapters seem to be one of Professor Kimās myths told in Folklore 517. Weāre both being told the story and a part of it at the same time.
Also, as someone who works in banking, if I have to read āsafety deposit boxā one more time I may put my eyeballs in a blender.
karigan commented on caait's update
karigan commented on a post
karigan commented on a post
karigan started reading...

Alchemy of Secrets
Stephanie Garber
karigan commented on notbillnye's update
karigan commented on karigan's update
karigan commented on a feature request
As we make a better distinction between book forum posts and personal progress update comments, could we add a spoiler tag to the progress update posts?
Sometimes I want to document my reaction to something that happens in the book but I've been going to the book forum because that's the only place I can safely prevent spoiling it for others.
karigan wrote a review...
Needle Lake follows two cousins during a tumultuous winter break in which a man ends up dead. Ida is a young, socially awkward teenager, enamored with her older cousin, Elna, who exudes the confidence Ida wishes she could have. Both girls will learn more about themselves than they ever wished to uncover as they start to create more and more secrets together.
Both Elna and Ida are incredibly well written, perfectly capturing the range that younger and older adolescents reach while just trying to fit in. Told through Ida's POV, you feel every emotion she feels through Champine's beautiful prose.
I loved the pace of this book until the last two chapters. While I think this was another purposeful element of the writing, the ending was very sudden and left me wanting more.
Overall, the story was an intense, yet predictable ride from start to finish. Any adult knows exactly how this story goes. Two teenage girls; one impressionable, one a bad influence--how do you think that story is going to unfold? This is not a knock on the book, I actually quite enjoyed this aspect because this is a "journey over destination" type of book.
Thank you to Random House Publishing and NetGalley for providing an advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review.
karigan finished a book

Needle Lake
Justine Champine
karigan commented on a post
I read this part yesterday but Iāve been thinking about it ever since. It had to do with challenging the idea that creatives should suffer for their art. The author explains that keeping yourself sick for the sake of remaining creative is a harmful narrative we perpetuate both in the able bodied and disabled communities. Their specific perspective was regarding medication and how it takes their creativity away but that it is worth it to lose that part of themselves in order to be healthy.
Iād love to hear what other disabled people think about this. Do you agree? If you agree, do you follow this principle for yourself or do you suffer for your art?