1830 2 0
|
She’s right there in Thirsty’s. In her usual spot. Drinking her usual drink. Yuengling on tap. One after another.
And he’s there too. Behind the bar. Pouring drinks. One after another.
Sometimes they speak. But mostly she orders. He pours. And
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1830 4 3
|
She brought the ends of her fingers to her mouth and moistened them in her warm saliva. The whorls of her prints glistened in the harsh light of the room, but it wasn't her own outlines she was interested in raising. His hand lay outstretched in his…
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1830 9 5
|
Hair as black as a Raven’s wing. Dark eyes. You wore a black dress, too, my favorite color.
|
1830 6 3
|
I can tell you all about rock bottom.
|
1830 6 5
|
I am in the bad habit of telling people they are the scum of the earth.
|
1829 2 1
|
The Bike Messenger on Lexington Avenue
Comes to rest
taking a moment
in the falling rain
slowly massaging the
veins at the top
of his bald head
Cracking his neck
while the yellow cabs start
honking behind him
Unwilling to mov
|
1829 17 15
|
There he was. Minnesota Fats, short and pudgy, jowly and blond-haired.
|
1829 24 14
|
Our lives depend on/
engineers
|
1829 5 4
|
You know how it is, one day a good friend sends you this long note telling you how-the-hell they are or aren't getting along in the frigging world
|
1829 10 4
|
Who puts Vaseline
on the forefinger
of Lenin?
I want to know
|
1829 11 7
|
Kramer wraps himself around Kramer’s legs, from behind, then lifts him and tips him up and over and down, per their rehearsed routine.
|
1828 8 4
|
“I don’t know what’s going on there,” Hank, who hated his name and wanted a more Biblical name because those names (Jeremiah! Matthew! David!)—although common—sound ominous, said as he pointed up to the top of the apartment building that housed the whores
|
1828 7 6
|
At noon on a weekday in the off season, when the trickle of tourists who wandered into the Mermaid Curio Shoppe had died out completely, she walked in with wet hair, leaving tiny puddles on the floorboards.
|
1828 13 7
|
beware the slice of the knife cutting like a curious comet blasting through solar systems down the throat of the bad ass milky way
|
1828 8 7
|
Before he was Francesco Martinelli
|
1828 0 0
|
She administers the alkaloids slowly,
soaking the muscles in blight,
the body tissue beneath into corrosion.
|
1828 2 1
|
He had expected more -- at least his grandfather's classic Packard touring car.
|
1828 4 1
|
Leo, leo, leo, leo, the word itself imprinted on my brain, carved with a pearl handled blade into my cerebral cortex, into the medulla, burrowed deep into my dreams, I miss your kissing.
|
1828 1 1
|
Almost 24 hours ago in Pakistan, Osama Bin Laden was sleeping just as he had slept every night for the hundreds of days prior; comfortable in a million dollar compound with his son and advisors around him...
|
1827 6 1
|
Bearing the smell of paper on her fingertips. Ink in her hair.
|
1827 10 5
|
Are we like a poem, a short hand of words curtained together, evoking a mood, but in the end, impenetrable? We follow the clues to our lover's heart and what we find isn't him at all but ourselves. We fill every part of his life, every part of his past and even become…
|
1827 4 3
|
And don’t you dare start panicking. Just sit there silently, letting the truth that you’re alone sear the back of your neck until it starts to feel cold.
|
1827 1 0
|
I’ve been here before.
it wasn’t you though—
it was her before you,
and then she before her …
before you.
|
1827 9 4
|
Three hours isn't that long.
|
1827 2 1
|
When I ate with my girls, Bliss and Victoria, I would lift my head up and look at us eating until I could imagine him chiding me. “Our daughters are looking more and more like you each day,” he’d say. “Fat!” I didn’t feel like eating when I thought abo
|
1827 10 8
|
A dark girl, quite poor, maybe three, maybe four, leaned on a statue of a horse and his man. (The rider rode him in place, but as if in a race.) Her dress needed patching, her heart needed smoothing. She'd tried to sell…
|
1827 7 4
|
The things we do for books, she thought.
|
1827 17 10
|
Even if your heart is as large as a small car, your tongue as heavy as two grown men—even then—you will have to carry it with you wherever you go.
|
1827 1 1
|
Who do you think are the true intellectuals? I'm a fan of both Gore Vidal and Harold Bloom although most people can't stand either of them. George Plimpton is interesting...
|
1827 7 5
|
“It’s a sad thing,” I said, “when a man has to suffer just for getting a little on the side.”
|