1852 12 12
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Momma called them Vaughens, "a outfit," and said, "they shoulda throwed the book at that Darla Jean."
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1852 6 4
|
Light. And shade. Line and shape. Colour, form and perspective. Wall, wood, ceiling or canvas. Pigment in eggyolk or linseed oil. Stroked by brush or spread by knife. On small panels or plastered on vast spaces. All these problems to be worked over and solved. Then …
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1852 10 5
|
"She had been warned." (this started as a fun alien story and then took a human turn.)
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1852 0 1
|
I watch my brother carry her into the hospital, and I love him with parts of myself I didn’t know were capable of love. I love my brother with the space behind my eyes, the skin between my fingers, the ends of my hair, the crease in my neck. I love him wi
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1851 4 2
|
He returned to America on the Fourth of July. Twisting in his cramped window seat miles above the Atlantic, he buckled up before the descent. “You can handle this,” he muttered. Hungover, still reeling from the dreamy head-turning experience of…
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1851 17 14
|
Tan my hide. Feed me to rabid / macaques.
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1851 2 2
|
I got to Victoria station at quarter to eleven on a Friday with nothing but a small leather bag and the vague idea of getting out of London.
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1851 3 1
|
We’re all competitive and drunk.
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1851 12 10
|
She’d once read the Time-Life Encyclopedia on The Universe and became obsessed with the woman from Alabama who was singled out, by a rock from a far place, in her sleep.
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1851 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...
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1850 6 6
|
When she finally arrived it was like a cello playing inside me
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1850 4 0
|
There was that long weekend she'd spent lazing around a suite at the Beverly Wilshire between the Golden Globes and the Oscars with the suddenly now married actor, and then there had been Cabo. This was before the current thing and before the thing before
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1850 12 9
|
What happened later that evening is unclear. When Mickey got back to his quarters, he was in good spirits. Buoyant even.
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1850 1 1
|
Once, when I had not talked to you in a long time, I woke with your name in my mouth.
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1850 10 8
|
nothing can stop a group of genteel Southern women from a card game, and divine intervention makes one's participation in such an event quite worthwhile
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1850 16 15
|
When I died, she said, she was going to have me cremated and put my ashes in the cats’ litter box.
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1850 16 15
|
The dancer was a little chubby, but I didn't mind. It gave her more to shake.
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1850 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.
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1849 0 0
|
—with spinster goddesses in the middle of things / circling looms.
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1849 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.
|
1849 1 0
|
“What I really want to know is, why is a straight guy called Caspar opening a lesbian leather bar in Berlin anyway?” Shona asked. “Schöneberg must really be going to the dogs.”
|
1849 2 1
|
She persisted. “How long have we been here?”
A note of anger crept into his voice. “How long? How long? Why …, why ….” He swallowed hard, realized he had forgotten.
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1849 7 5
|
We could kiss under the elder tree, even though it was forbidden, even though we were drowned by the noise of the river and nothing we said was right
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1849 9 8
|
Travel into the beautiful swirling being you occupy whenever you get the chance. It's your right to seek the name of the most holy one in your deepest awakening. Then will you most likely find fellow travelers splashing about in their naked auras in…
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1849 2 3
|
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1849 10 2
|
Time
Holds
Ultimately
Nothing
Dear
Except
Reunion
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1849 10 9
|
poets can kill, or at least they once could:/
perhaps poems tamed us, if they are any good.
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1848 7 2
|
"My dear man. We are not friends we are symbiotic."
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1848 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.
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1848 6 5
|
He checks the bedrooms first,
then the hallway,
followed by the living room
and the bathrooms.
When he can't find you he takes to calling out,
daddy,
I'm sure the neighbors hear.
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