Sunshine is Forever is off to an excellent start. Depression can be a difficult topic to write about, especially from the perspective of the young, but Kyle T. Cowan's writing already reminds me of two of the greatest "troubled youth" stories I've ever read: Girl, Interrupted, and Holes. Sunshine is Forever evokes a deliciously uncomfortable blend of the two which, combined with whatever mysterious tragedy kicks off Hunter's downward spiral, is hitting all the right notes and leaving me hungry for more.
Sunshine is Forever is off to an excellent start. Depression can be a difficult topic to write about, especially from the perspective of the young, but Kyle T. Cowan's writing already reminds me of two of the greatest "troubled youth" stories I've ever read: Girl, Interrupted, and Holes. Sunshine is Forever evokes a deliciously uncomfortable blend of the two which, combined with whatever mysterious tragedy kicks off Hunter's downward spiral, is hitting all the right notes and leaving me hungry for more.
So you’ve inadvertently trapped an ancient trans-dimensional god in your backyard shed; what do you do? That’s what Venus McKenzy and her friends would like to know.