Al Burian's personal story of trying to break up with his girlfriend, deal with his mother, and make sense of his life, could be seen as darkly sarcastic by some, if they overlook the attention to detail with which he writes. The story is not nearly so much about what happens to his characters as it is commenting about the environment around him,the universality of desperation, and the beauty of the bizarre in life's circumstances.
Comments for Invisible Ink: Burn
This piece belongs to the series "Invisible Ink: Series #1"
Produced by Roman Mars
Other pieces by Roman Mars
Rating Summary
1 comment
Anika Cunningham
Posted on December 12, 2004 at 06:12 PM | Permalink
Review of Invisible Ink: Burn
Al Burian's personal story of trying to break up with his girlfriend, deal with his mother, and make sense of his life, could be seen as darkly sarcastic by some, if they overlook the attention to detail with which he writes. The story is not nearly so much about what happens to his characters as it is commenting about the environment around him,the universality of desperation, and the beauty of the bizarre in life's circumstances.