1840 9 9
|
They sat before the fire and played cribbage. He was a good player, but not as good as she was.
|
1840 10 9
|
poets can kill, or at least they once could:/
perhaps poems tamed us, if they are any good.
|
1839 14 9
|
Maybe all quarterbacks are shitwads.
|
1839 12 12
|
Your soap on the shelf in the shower
melts with my every hair wash
and I'll miss it the way I should have missed you.
|
1839 12 10
|
Poor kid. She didn't mean to leave my business card on her kitchen counter next to the telephone. It was a mistake.
|
1839 3 1
|
We’re all competitive and drunk.
|
1839 16 9
|
homelessness, you called the lie,
|
1839 12 8
|
No fuckin' way, Maude. Excuse me, but you know I can't stand that bag of wind. No way.
|
1839 16 15
|
When I died, she said, she was going to have me cremated and put my ashes in the cats’ litter box.
|
1839 3 5
|
The vampire donated floodlights so the children could play ballgames at night. The lights came on but the dugouts remained vacant. The vampire sat alone in the bleachers. “Sometimes I am less than the sum of my parts,” he said to the sum of his parts.
|
1838 10 9
|
The tiny green light flashing in the lawn of an apartment building one night that caught Roberta’s attention while we were walking home from Café Vita.
|
1838 12 12
|
Momma called them Vaughens, "a outfit," and said, "they shoulda throwed the book at that Darla Jean."
|
1838 10 3
|
She refuses to let her eyes cry. Her eyes played tricks on her and showed her one thing was really another. They don't deserve to cry.
|
1838 10 5
|
"She had been warned." (this started as a fun alien story and then took a human turn.)
|
1838 3 0
|
the white moon is dangling
by a thread tonight
you close your eyes
and listen to it undress
and suppress, suppress
you listen to it undress
while you yourself hang lifeless
in your own arms
not meaning to do yourself any
harm, not
|
1837 11 8
|
“Sometimes when I feel the urge to create, I don’t know whether to grab my paints, my camera, my guitar or my pen.”
“You could have sex,” her friend, sitting in the desk next to hers, joked.
|
1837 7 2
|
It’s not just the mailman. It’s the logo on the mailbox down the street. It’s the uniform. It’s any man or woman in the whole unsettling profession.
|
1837 20 8
|
Phoebe-Lou Adams wrote this of them
|
1837 10 4
|
So, like I said. Da. I have dealt with the men, when I was a lap dancer. The men they need the….manipulations. I have good hands. They want me to see them naked, their power. Here it is only the women. The massage, the facial, the waxing...
|
1837 14 11
|
|
1836 17 15
|
Before the days of “customer experience,” Eddie figured out whatever information he could about his clients. He asked them for business cards, recorded their phone numbers from the reservation book, snapped photos of them in his mind…
|
1836 0 0
|
—with spinster goddesses in the middle of things / circling looms.
|
1836 2 1
|
She stepped into a pair of high heeled slippers and began to dance. She was Salome, a witch, dancing like the most beautiful, the most skilled whores of Paris.
|
1836 1 0
|
It was stubborn early winter, when everyone was cold but went outside anyways, rubbing red fingers and shuffling feet.
|
1836 7 6
|
There’s not enough cigarette cloud to conceal her, malnourished and pale beneath blue and pink lights that summon 80s-era skate rinks. She saunters towards the center of the stage, asking her bored expression to convey detachment, while a DJ that fits the
|
1836 7 2
|
French pee runs stronger, less minty. In France the world' a pissoir.
|
1836 16 15
|
The dancer was a little chubby, but I didn't mind. It gave her more to shake.
|
1836 14 9
|
It would be another difference a building has from a “sculpture”. It would be something that even photographers would have difficulty in disguising, since many modern buildings, even many modern photographs of buildings, place such emphasis on symmetry. For both…
|
1835 2 1
|
He’d been wishing for months that he’d bought a retro clothing store. He would have called it HARRY’S HOARY HOSERRY. He would have met a better class of women.
|
1835 5 2
|
“It’s about basic working conditions!” she says, rubbing ice cubes on her nipples.
|