I just finished reading 'May Cause Side Effects' last week, and wow, what a ride! If you're worried about spoilers, I totally get it—nobody wants their reading experience ruined. The book does have some major plot twists, especially around the middle and towards the end. One in particular involves the protagonist's relationship with their mentor, and it completely flipped my understanding of the story.
That said, the beauty of this book isn't just in the surprises but in how it handles themes like identity and consequence. Even if someone spoiled a twist for me, I'd still recommend reading it for the prose alone. The author has this way of making every emotion feel raw and real, like you're living it alongside the characters. Just avoid deep-dive forums until you're done!
Oh, this book is a minefield of spoilers! The climax hinges on a revelation that recontextualizes everything before it. I accidentally stumbled on a forum post that spoiled it for me, and while I still enjoyed the journey, I wish I’d gone in blind. The tension builds so masterfully—knowing the endgame steals some of that magic.
Minor spoilers? Sure, they’re everywhere. But the big ones? Guard those like treasure. The emotional payoff is worth it.
I can say 'May Cause Side Effects' is best enjoyed fresh. There are a few big reveals—like the true nature of the 'side effects' mentioned in the title—that hit harder if you don't see them coming. The pacing is deliberate, so when those moments land, they land.
What’s interesting is how the foreshadowing works. On a reread, I caught so many subtle hints I’d missed the first time. It’s the kind of story that rewards careful attention, but also one where spoilers could dull the impact of its most powerful scenes. If you’re sensitive to that, maybe steer clear of fan discussions until you’ve turned the last page.
2026-03-23 11:17:31
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Brooklyn’s 'May Cause Side Effects' wraps up with this gut-punch of emotional honesty that lingers long after the last page. The protagonist, after spiraling through med adjustments, therapy sessions, and messy relationships, finally hits a breaking point—not the dramatic kind, but the quiet, exhausted sort where they just stop fighting themselves. The final chapters show them tentatively rebuilding trust in their own mind, framed by this raw conversation with their therapist about how 'recovery isn’t linear.' What stuck with me was the absence of a neat resolution; instead, there’s this bittersweet acceptance of ongoing work, punctuated by a darkly funny list of actual medication side effects during the credits. It feels earned, like the character’s finally seeing their struggles as part of their story rather than something to erase.
That last scene where they doodle in their journal—half-scribbled thoughts alongside doodles of their dog—captures the tone perfectly. Progress isn’t grand epiphanies here; it’s small, weird, and deeply human. The book’s strength is how it resists wrapping things up with a bow, leaving you with this quiet hope that’s way more relatable than any triumphant ending could’ve been.