Books by Gordon Plotkin
Memories Dream and the Grid: Vol I
Grid wakes up in the middle of the night screaming, “THE ELEVATOR! NO HANK!” a few days before his 19th birthday. He’d just had his first nightmare, the first of two. To date, all of his dreams had been unusually pleasant. And, until a few days before Grid’s 19th birthday, the protagonists were unknown to him. Grid had been dreaming about Mike and Hank, The Brothers Who Weren’t Brothers, the main characters of what played out like a series of movies in his head every night since his second birthday. As a child, he had wondered what it was all about. When he asked his mother, Dolly, she became enraged and lashed out at him.
Grid was persuaded that Hank and Mike were not real. Dolly then sternly warned her son not to mention it for fear that people would think Grid was insane like his grandfather. Grid was born on the day he died. She didn’t tell him Mike was his grandfather or that Hank was his uncle but not his biological uncle.
Grid only began to wonder what it was all about after his first nightmare, which occurred days before his 19th birthday on an Israeli Kibbutz. He decided to share his dreams with his roommate for the first time after waking up from his second nightmare screaming, “NO HANK! PLEASE DO NOT LEAVE ME!”
Memories Dream and the Grid: Vol II
Grid wakes up in the middle of the night screaming, “THE ELEVATOR! NO HANK!” a few days before his 19th birthday. He’d just had his first nightmare, the first of two. To date, all of his dreams had been unusually pleasant. And, until a few days before Grid’s 19th birthday, the protagonists were unknown to him. Grid had been dreaming about Mike and Hank, The Brothers Who Weren’t Brothers, the main characters of what played out like a series of movies in his head every night since his second birthday. As a child, he had wondered what it was all about. When he asked his mother, Dolly, she became enraged and lashed out at him.
Grid was persuaded that Hank and Mike were not real. Dolly then sternly warned her son not to mention it for fear that people would think Grid was insane like his grandfather. Grid was born on the day he died. She didn’t tell him Mike was his grandfather or that Hank was his uncle but not his biological uncle.
Grid only began to wonder what it was all about after his first nightmare, which occurred days before his 19th birthday on an Israeli Kibbutz. He decided to share his dreams with his roommate for the first time after waking up from his second nightmare screaming, “NO HANK! PLEASE DO NOT LEAVE ME!”
Memories Dream and the Grid: Vol III
Grid wakes up in the middle of the night screaming, “THE ELEVATOR! NO HANK!” a few days before his 19th birthday. He’d just had his first nightmare, the first of two. To date, all of his dreams had been unusually pleasant. And, until a few days before Grid’s 19th birthday, the protagonists were unknown to him. Grid had been dreaming about Mike and Hank, The Brothers Who Weren’t Brothers, the main characters of what played out like a series of movies in his head every night since his second birthday. As a child, he had wondered what it was all about. When he asked his mother, Dolly, she became enraged and lashed out at him.
Grid was persuaded that Hank and Mike were not real. Dolly then sternly warned her son not to mention it for fear that people would think Grid was insane like his grandfather. Grid was born on the day he died. She didn’t tell him Mike was his grandfather or that Hank was his uncle but not his biological uncle.
Grid only began to wonder what it was all about after his first nightmare, which occurred days before his 19th birthday on an Israeli Kibbutz. He decided to share his dreams with his roommate for the first time after waking up from his second nightmare screaming, “NO HANK! PLEASE DO NOT LEAVE ME!”
Memories Dreams and The Grid: Vol IV
Days before his 19th birthday, Grid awakes in the middle of the night screaming, “THE ELEVATOR! NO HANK!”
He had just endured his first nightmare – his first of two. His dreams had been unusually pleasant to date – all of them. And until days before Grid’s 19th Birthday the protagonists were people he didn’t know, or so he thought.
Every night since his second birthday, Grid would dream about Mike and Hank, The Brothers who weren’t really Brothers, the main characters of what played out like a series of movies in Grid’s head every night as he slept. He had wondered as a child what it was all about. When he asked his mother, Dolly, she became inexplicably cross and lashed out at her son. She convinced Grid that Hank and Mike weren’t real. And then Dolly warned her son sternly to never speak of it for fear that people would think Grid was crazy like his Grandfather. He had died the day Grid was born. She didn’t tell him Mike was that grandfather and Hank was his uncle, but not his real uncle.
Grid only began to wonder anew what it was all about after his first nightmare, days before his 19th birthday on a Kibbutz in Israel. He decided to share his dreams for the first time with his roommate after waking from his second nightmare screaming, “NO HANK! DON’T LEAVE ME!”