Rock Breaks Scissors Cut
International Horror Guild Award nominee 2003.
The mysterious Dr. Gold has heavy-duty backing to fund a project having to do with the recording of dreams. Her three star volunteers — Jovana, a fashion model, Gilbert, a pop journalist, and Melinda, a bookstore employee — seem to have nothing in common until the experiments interlink them in unanticipated ways. Joined via their own dreams and nightmares, they begin to discover that each is critical to the very existence of the other two. Is it part of the research, just another dream, or have they crossed a line that cannot be erased? Schow's first novel-length work in over a decade explores just what it means to be connected in a world where commitment is fluid, and nothing is ever really what it seems to be.
Readers also enjoyed
David J. Schow
David J. Schow (born 1955) is an American author of horror novels, short stories, and screenplays. His credits include films such as The Crow and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning. Most of Schow's work falls into the sub-genre splatterpunk, a term he is sometimes credited with coining. In the 1990s, Schow wrote a regular column for Fangoria magazine.
In 1987 Schow's novella Pamela's Get won a Bram Stoker Award for best long fiction. "Red Light" won the 1987 World Fantasy Award for Best Short Fiction.

