News, Rants, and Politics

Weapons of Mass Distraction
The Devil's Advocate
Piper's Pit
An Open Letter to the VA
No Evidence? No Problem!
Sins and Sinners
The Yuppie Invasion
The Crissman Collection
News Archives

Music, Film, Art

Femme Fatale
Goad'X Entertainment
Urban Bombshells
Music
Skelator Unmasked
Blackeyes and Neckties
Super Geek League
Butchers Block
Sinful Art of Dr. Steve
Pierced Hearts Tattoos
Fear & Sinning in Seattle
The Skinny on Ron Placone
Read This
Art
Sinner Movie Que
Surly Gourmand
Gluttony
Artists from the Past

Religion, Sex and Random Sin

Dance as Foreplay
Masks
Campfire Tales
Bitching with Buddha
Bitching with Lucifer
Polypositivity
This I Shamlessly Tell You
Undead Diaries
The Vice is Right
Domination Therapy
Serial Killer Horrorscope
Huggy Talk: Ask the Player
Sex Toy Reviews
The Limey Collection
Athiest Rat Collection
Seasonal Articles
Thou Shalt Not Miss

Download a Seattle Sinner
Poster

Where to Find Us

Cuckoo - Madison Clell
review by Ben Bracken, Vol 2 Issue 14

Cuckoo is the stark, sometimes painful first person account of author Madison Clell’s experiences living with multiple personality disorder. Clell relates her life, discovering her disorder and coming to grips with it will all the emotional intensity of a gut punch. The fact that she presents Cuckoo in a comic strip format only enhances the intensity of the narrative. The reader literally seeing inside Clell’s mind, seeing of her alternate identities exactly as she does. Clell’s narrative doesn’t shy away from the details of the childhood abuse with resulted in her disorder, taking the reader further into her world where the monsters under the bed are real, and trusting a stranger with candy can be deadly.

Cuckoo takes you on the psychological rollercoaster ride people suffering from multiple personality disorder, live with from day to day. Never once letting you forget that it is all true, the events Clell relates really happened. Cuckoo reminds readers that all of those terrible things we here about on t.v. and in the movies really do happen. It puts a face to all of those people most people just think of abstractly as “victims”.

For more information check out www.cuckoocomic.com.