karigan commented on jordynreads's update
karigan commented on a post
I was really looking forward to this book but I just can’t keep going.
This author has created a really interesting world and yet is unwilling or unable to fully explore the ramifications of her decision. England cannot just step out of the international world for 400 years and everything still be the same. England was the biggest Empire ever, you can’t change that without changing a whole lot of other things and yet England has still progressed to the Victorian era.
Add to that but both Ivy and Emmett are your standard protagonist and love interest, basic writing and modern language and this is just not worth finishing
Post from the King's Cage (Red Queen, #3) forum
karigan commented on a post
(Coming from a white person) why can’t white people accept that other cultures have different customs, practices, and rituals than you?
karigan commented on notbillnye's update
Post from the King's Cage (Red Queen, #3) forum
karigan commented on notbillnye's update
karigan commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I've been looking at some posts I made last July and find that they were rather low effort or lack context (back then the forums weren't as cluttered and there weren't any precise posting guidelines so I didn't realise). Now I don't remember the books enough to consolidate them so I was thinking about what to do. I think deleting them is a bit strong, but I definitely think they could be archived.
Should I report my own content? 🤣🤣 Has anyone else thought about that? 🤡
Post from the King's Cage (Red Queen, #3) forum
karigan is interested in reading...

Japanese Gothic
Kylie Lee Baker
karigan commented on lizzyy's update
lizzyy TBR'd a book

Japanese Gothic
Kylie Lee Baker
karigan commented on karigan's review of Razorblade Tears
I really don't think I was the intended audience for this...but I'm not sure who this was written for? This feels like a love letter to the men who require action and blood in any media they consume, but that audience tends to be quite conservative. This is not a conservative friendly book. But then at the same time, it's not progressive enough to appeal to that kind of crowd either.
I'm not saying that a book has to be one or the other, in fact there are many that blur the conservative/progressive line well. But in my opinion, this book fails to represent either side, or a middle of the road perspective, well at all. I am impressed that this book is as popular as it is despite all this.
I appreciate that the main characters were always themselves even when their thoughts or actions aren't palatable to readers. Cosby does a great job making these characters unlikeable without making it about their imprisonment. They're just not great guys and it's always impressive when an author can write that way without it making the book bad!
My reason for the low rating is ultimately the confusing audience, action scenes that feel forced, and the way the female characters are treated by the author.
karigan commented on karigan's update
karigan TBR'd a book

Rot: An Imperial History of the Irish Famine
Padraic X. Scanlan
karigan commented on karigan's update
karigan TBR'd a book

Rot: An Imperial History of the Irish Famine
Padraic X. Scanlan