1782 16 9
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She was as distant as Mao, someone I never met, but whom everyone carried in their eyes,
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1782 18 16
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captured by his lens and plates/
before humidity and hydrocarbons/
smudge the crisp clean lines
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1782 16 14
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fire rolls through
the drive-thru
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1782 7 6
|
His eyes drift over the body of every
woman who enters Starbucks, even though
he’s old enough to be their father or grandfather,
still his eyes are aware of every shape passing by,
refusing to let go, and die.
Maybe they’re speaking Polish or
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1782 2 1
|
He had expected more -- at least his grandfather's classic Packard touring car.
|
1782 6 2
|
The question posed a voluptuous riddle. Were these frenzied silhouettes
gestures of Jackson Pollock’s dribble?
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1781 6 1
|
Bearing the smell of paper on her fingertips. Ink in her hair.
|
1781 0 0
|
At the time I first went to work for Mr. Byron my family was in a sorrowful state. My dad, much as I can recall, was one of those roving kinds, called himself a carpenter or contractor, depending on the kind of job he was aspiring to, and was subject to f
|
1781 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
|
1780 8 5
|
For the next two hours, Ed goes nonchalantly about his business, buck naked the whole time. He putters around the house, writes e mails, waters plants, vacuums the rug and sweeps the porch. I pretend to ignore his nudity
|
1780 6 2
|
Kitchen Knife (n.)1. A standard kitchen tool consisting of a sharp blade attached to a handle intended for cutting, peeling, chopping, slicing, and dicing.2. Used primarily for food preparation (see also BUTCHERING; BACKSTABBING; JACK THE RIPPER; DEATH BY A THOUSAND…
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1780 6 4
|
My cousin had put them up last year, showed me when we stood on her bed as her fingers pointed, traced over the outlines, then turned out the lights, so that I could see them glow.
|
1780 7 1
|
Homer relaxes in his tan, faded recliner, remote in hand, and watches death unfold on his television.
|
1780 5 1
|
One year, she got a kite.
|
1780 17 12
|
A starved hunchbacked figure covered in blanket gently steers a one eyed dog along with him. A four legged shadow serving as his longtime companion against the all-consuming vacuum of the universe. A friend for all times.A thin scar runs from his cheekbone to…
|
1780 0 0
|
It’s confusing enough to grow up in a place like America, a country without definitive culture, except for ranch dressing and reality TV, but it’s even worse to grow up half one thing, half another, christened a hyphenation of names without connection to
|
1780 18 16
|
We die in order to get some rest
|
1780 1 0
|
There were literally thousands of criteria that got people of every stripe and strata on the list, which had been maintained since before the very first human fingers scrawled crude images on blank surfaces.
|
1780 3 2
|
The ideas just came to them. "Nothing On" consisted of a television on a small stand, playing an endless loop of "Jersey Shore." "Shopping Bores Me" was a men's flannel shirt from American Apparel on an otherwise empty rack.
|
1780 7 6
|
This no man's island I'm perched high above isn't always so beautiful to the casual beholder of newly printed maps. Oh don't go and get your clouds all wrong. Puffed or thin, everything I say I believe in is a real feeling, until the music dies…
|
1780 12 10
|
Christ walks the streets of Venice,/has long since become a regular . . .
|
1779 1 2
|
My parents were married for forty five years. “A lifetime,” is how the rabbi at my mother's funeral describes it. The man says it with such a tone of familiarity, of genuine sadness, that one might think he has known and adored my parents all their lives. But…
|
1779 4 4
|
|
1779 4 2
|
Martin named it “Squishy” for two reasons. The first reason was because it was the noise it made when it came out of the hole in his basement. The second is because it’s what it did to Grandfather...
|
1779 12 9
|
Some time ago, I began to write you letters with the idea of helping your newspaper become a more complete map of our little shared world.
|
1779 7 4
|
The things we do for books, she thought.
|
1779 1 0
|
|
1779 7 5
|
“It’s a sad thing,” I said, “when a man has to suffer just for getting a little on the side.”
|
1779 0 2
|
I might as well just keep driving. Past my exit. Beyond my job. Just drive. Until the tank runs out of gas. A blank future is better than this bleak one.
|
1779 2 2
|
Wee-wee-sweet-pea me? I live, I weep, a third of me passed in sleep, start a scene or two, play and dance the fool, …
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