karigan started reading...

Alchemy of Secrets
Stephanie Garber
karigan finished reading and left a rating...
karigan finished reading and left a rating...
karigan started reading...

When in Rome (When in Rome, #1)
Sarah Adams
karigan commented on a post
Everytime I read this book I forget that it begins with Lockwoodâs point of view. His complete lack of self awareness, and inability to understand social cues, is pure comedy.
karigan commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I see we can't create quests, which I fully understand. Is there anyway to get the 52 book clubs 2026 challenge as a quest? It provides prompts not specific books, so unsure if we can do a quest like that.
karigan commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Trigger warnings are very important for a lot of people. We need to put them somewhere so people who need them can easily find them. I think we need to careful about them though.
This didnât happen here and itâs not important who said what where but someone just gave me unsolicited trigger warnings for The Favourites, a book I was looking forward to reading cold, and now I know more about the themes of the book than I wanted to know. They were basically spoilers. Iâve managed to watch 3 reviews of The Favourites on YouTube without anyone mentioning some of the themes and spoiling it.
I like how TheStoryGraph does trigger warnings. You only get to see them if you click the arrow. We need to be aware though that dropping trigger warnings into reviews and discussions can be spoilers.
Iâm probably more upset about this than I should be but I canât unsee what I read. I donât read reviews very often because this has happened before when someoneâs written a review, added trigger warnings and hasnât used spoiler features.
Just to reiterate, Iâm not saying we should get rid of trigger warnings. We just need to be careful about them.
karigan wrote a review...
Went into this expecting a boring classic romance and was pleasantly surprised by a gothic story told by and about the worst people you'll ever come across. (No I did not read the synopsis). Based on others' reactions to this book, I really wasn't expecting to like it much, but it might be my new favorite classic!
The first few chapters are a lot to take in. You're thrown into a story with too many characters to keep track of, many who have the same or similar names. I highly recommend looking up a family tree to get acquainted BUT please know you will absolutely spoil some things for yourself by doing so. This one is the least spoilery I could find.
In terms of the actual story, this is a great example of the way that isolation and abuse are never ending cycles unless someone makes an active choice to break them. I appreciate that Brontë didn't shy away from showing how awful every single character was. Racism, sexism, and classism are all at play here and each person in the book perpetuates them despite being victims of one or more -ism.
This certainly won't be a hit for everyone, but if you enjoy beautiful writing in a gothic setting, it may just work for you.
karigan commented on a post
karigan finished a book

Wuthering Heights
Emily Brontë
karigan is interested in reading...

Ace: What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex
Angela Chen