
Buy CHALLENGER DEEP Art and Support the National Alliance on Mental IllnessOn October 5, 2015
Oct 4, 2015
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The Official Shustermania Store Is Now Open
It’s been a long time in the works—my official Storenvy store is now open for business!
The new store features my son Brendan’s artwork from Challenger Deep, available in 8×10 and 5×7 full-color, autographed prints. Fifty percent of the proceeds from all sales will be donated to NAMI—the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

By the way, if you didn’t hear, Challenger Deep is a National Book Award nominee! I’m thrilled by all the attention the book has received, and encouraged by the way readers have used it to start a conversation about mental health. From the bottoms of our hearts, Brendan and I would like thank everyone who has read it and shared their thoughts with us. Thank you for telling your stories as well.
***Attention international shoppers: please note that unfortunately we cannot fulfill international orders at this time. If you place an order from outside the U.S., I have to refund your payment immediately. Sorry for the inconvenience!***






I find FNF Game endlessly replayable because the tight timing, bold characters, and mod scene keep challenges fresh while rewarding practice and musical focus.
Despite its retro appearance, Retro Bowl offers surprisingly deep mechanics that reward smart decisions, precise timing, and long-term planning.
The gameplay is kept fresh and unpredictable by geometry these adjustments, so players have to react fast and stay vigilant. In order to unlock harder stages and take on challenges made by other players, you must become an expert in each mode.
There are no power-ups, no different modes, but the Dinosaur Game offers an engaging and unpredictable experience.
In granny game, It is not up to me to decide, but I am keen to know from store whether it has any plans to go international in the future, since a lot of people outside the USA would like to buy paintings from Challenger Deep.
In that's not my neighbor, the book itself is a profound journey — using the image of a voyage to the deepest place on Earth as a metaphor for the experience of a person with mental illness.