1855 3 1
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We’re all competitive and drunk.
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1855 12 8
|
No fuckin' way, Maude. Excuse me, but you know I can't stand that bag of wind. No way.
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1854 0 0
|
As children we invent games and we're really creative. We concoct ridiculous rules and enjoy making adaptations to them. And everything makes sense. Then you grow up, lose creativity. You don't invent games anymore. Recess is replaced with a second…
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1854 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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1854 6 4
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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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1854 9 9
|
They sat before the fire and played cribbage. He was a good player, but not as good as she was.
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1854 10 5
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"She had been warned." (this started as a fun alien story and then took a human turn.)
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1853 6 6
|
When she finally arrived it was like a cello playing inside me
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1853 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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1853 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.”
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1853 2 2
|
Hi, I'm Harmony Korine. I esteem douchebags.
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1853 1 0
|
They gave Lee a bunch of morphine in the ambulance and he came to vaguely, murmuring shit about God and mermaids.
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1853 12 12
|
Momma called them Vaughens, "a outfit," and said, "they shoulda throwed the book at that Darla Jean."
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1853 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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1853 7 5
|
“Ah Willie! Ah my boy! You poor sweet faced youth. Gone now! Our memories, Willie, our memories will haunt us forever with your laughter, your joy, your enduring excuses, your misspellings & badly slanted penmanship. Oh Willie. My boy. Gone & gone f
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1852 20 16
|
The custard of eternity is scooped into
the quantum cone of knowledge and drips
out the bottom one lifetime at a time.
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1852 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.
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1852 6 4
|
The sudden sound of his engine starting breaks the silence of the hot, summer, Florida night. As he drives away in his black Chevy truck he glances in the rear view mirror at his girlfriend's house. He tries to forget about the girl he is leaving behind. His heart begins to…
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1852 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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1852 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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1852 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
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1852 10 2
|
Time
Holds
Ultimately
Nothing
Dear
Except
Reunion
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1852 12 8
|
"Everything except food and sex."
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1852 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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1852 14 11
|
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1852 10 9
|
poets can kill, or at least they once could:/
perhaps poems tamed us, if they are any good.
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1852 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.
|
1851 9 1
|
I've come to the Playboy Mansion on a mission of mercy. Hugh Hefner, my good buddy, has just lost two girlfriends in a single day!
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1851 40 24
|
What used to be a scene has broken into fragments and blips of her on a screen I can’t control or manipulate.
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1851 10 6
|
I turn up the music and slip into drone, rock it like a tunnel in canary. When that does not erase his face, I cup my breast with one hand and let my hair fall.
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