@katherinekaras

erm oops there poo poo pee pee is a text place holder i forgot to change lol!!!

@xoxolorae

"poo poo pee pee" finally someone who understands me

@AwkwardBookworm

I think that has been your best title card yet

@kateisplaying

the way i had to rewind to check my eyes at the beginning im dying

@eileenkcho

The β€œpoo poo pee pee” πŸ˜‚ a much needed laugh during these ROUGH times in LA πŸ–€

@gizemarmagan5044

Ive been watching you for more than 5 years now and i love how you perceive life. Watching you building your life day by day and feeling like I’m your homebody is always relaxing. I’m glad for the random day I was scrolling on YouTube and I found you. You hold a special place in my heart ❀

@jadeitor_png

poo poo pee pee is such a mood

@jessiebee3423

Kat based on your reading preferences and how much you love Lord of the Rings and stuff I really think you would like Ursula K Le Guin! Her earthsea series is the most similar to Lord of the Rings tone wise. The rest of her stuff is radically progressive science fiction, I highly recommend

@BrendaMichelleReads

Love your cozy vlogs the intro card had me πŸ˜‚ lol

@grff_

In sense it told him nothing that was new, but that was part of the attraction. It said what he would have said, if it had been possible for him to set his scattered thoughts in order. It was the product of a mind similar to his own, but enormously more powerful, more systematic, less fear-ridden. The best books, he perceived, are those that tell you what you know already. 
What you said about the essays not really saying anything new but is the satisfaction of someone putting it into words reminded me of this quote from 1984!

@idkvalen

very excited for you to read more nonfiction/critical essays, i would love if you'd continue to talk about them!

@rchmoon

your channel is my new comfort place. thank youuuu

@flora_a3885

Happy bday to Rocky today the 10th ❀❀❀

@natasharedmane

I've never gotten to that specific book by Camus, but I recommend looking up his stance on the liberation of Algeria (he was, at best, neutral) and having that as context for what he has to say about resistance.
For a reading on colonialism that has stronger foundations, I'd recommend Frantz Fanon's Wretched of the Earth, he participated in the Algerian struggle for independence and became one of the most influential and important  anti-colonial thinkers.


Edit for context: He's French because he was born in french-occupied Algeria, hence his stance on the Algerian independence specifically

@naz.isthis

kat i had to say this. i feel like we’re growing up and it scares me but satisfies me at the same time you know? us fantasy readers dedicating more time to our history and purpose of our lives irl is just making me feel really grown up :)

@msvaal

You had me waiting impatiently for a video today! I was so happy when i saw your IG story!!  Wish you could post videos twice a week ✨️πŸ₯€πŸŒ™

@baileyreny7783

I just added The Factory to my TBR. I, too, had never heard of it, but that blurb sounds like a great concept.

@pandalynn7716

Will you make an apartment tour?πŸ₯°

@aakankshasingh8893

I love reading Shirley Jackson, such an immersive experience <3

@dlonegunman

Poo poo pee pee is the new black. β˜πŸ»πŸ€“πŸ“šπŸ““πŸ–ŒοΈβœοΈπŸ–ŠοΈπŸ–‹οΈ