1702 6 6
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The coffin-sized pit in his basement wasn’t freshly dug.
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1702 2 3
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Mr Robertson chuckled gently as he caught the aroma of freshly cooked cinnamon doughnuts and watched the oil leave its fingerprints.
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1701 2 2
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I remember thinking the seasons are arriving later every year,
as if the world has been slowed by the weight of graves.
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1701 3 3
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The next thing we knew, the KGB started tailing us everywhere we went. They must have heard about Lenin’s Paintings, was all we could figure. Because, what if they were real?
That night we went out to a pizza place where we saw the worst graffiti in t
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1701 2 0
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There's this sepia-toned photograph, which my mother gave me, of my brother and me when we were still both youngsters. In the picture my brother's dressed in a skimpy checked suit whose sleeves were already too short for him — on its way to becoming my
|
1701 8 5
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When the malady struck and the world fell dark at noon, she and I groped the walls and found our front door. Outside, bewildered, we heard the whine of jets in free-fall, explosions in the imagined distance. And we heard a car — or was it a truck that veered…
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1701 6 5
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There is an empty space,
between every note in rock 'n' roll,
where they have buried John Bonham,
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1701 17 12
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love weaves a perforated web
between the spikes
of longing
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1701 10 12
|
A cult is one thing; it defies common sense that a commonly educated person cannot escape cultist thinking and belonging. That cult, A.A., is girded by police, fire, therapy, hospitals, insurance companies, and courts.
|
1701 6 0
|
The two walked around, taking in all the classics: the imported Russian matryoshka dolls of varying styles and bright colors; spinning tops, red Radio Flyer wagons, kaleidoscopes, and wooden yo-yo's invoked memories of Christmases past. The hand-stitched
|
1701 12 8
|
|
1701 12 6
|
The ghosts run before/
attacking horsemen. A heart/
is ruptured by a spear.
|
1701 6 5
|
The robot may be grabbing onto something so big I'm mistaking it for the countryside, or the sunset. I could just be one cog in an infinite chain of leg-attachment, stretching from the cosmos to the sub-atomic.
|
1701 9 8
|
All were part of the household of Court Astronomer Tycho Brahe (1546-1601)
who lost his nose in a duel as a student
and went through life thereafter wearing a gold prosthetic one instead
and who met and fell in love with a commoner who bore him eigh
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1700 10 3
|
Kitchen.
sandwich.
wife.
daughter.
|
1700 1 1
|
Only ever been twelve men on the moon. And one cheese.
|
1700 12 11
|
Coward, cuckold, she taunts: So be it. He's not a young man anymore, nor as clever as he once was, or thought.
|
1700 15 16
|
He didn't hide it. He told her he was a mortician when he called. He had responded to her ad in the Lonely Hearts section of the newspaper.
|
1700 4 4
|
Sitting near her desk, like a dunce cap,
red
|
1700 17 14
|
I'd laugh, cry, splutter with confusion or outrage. I'd probably say “Duh” a lot, grow pale, flush, and wink at the viewers. I'd furrow my eyebrows, raise one or both, and my eyes would narrow, widen,…
|
1700 0 0
|
“He's the one who took five tries to find your vein during your last blood draw, right?” This question spilled from the row of twenty EKG machines that now made up the hospital building's larynx
|
1700 12 10
|
published in The Doctor T.J. Eckleburg Review.
|
1700 2 0
|
Last night aliens invaded our dishwasher.
|
1699 7 6
|
Scavenge at that address only if you feel possessed of great courage, a profound faith in resurrection or reincarnation, or an impatient desire for a premature date with certain death.
|
1699 4 4
|
She served him pie she knew was ruined.
|
1699 25 20
|
I read my book of names. Over and over again. Our name appeared in the newspaper 254,991 times between 1896 and 1944.
|
1699 3 2
|
Scientists have determined that a tiny freshwater organism known as the "bdelloid rotifer" gave up sex 40 million years ago. And you thought the spark had gone out of your marriage.
|
1699 17 8
|
|
1699 3 0
|
He did it in front of the waiter and everything.
|
1699 2 0
|
I only knew that my heart was not in my life as I was presently living it. I needed the breasts of my Helen in my mouth forever, or I was going to die. Die! Ah, the life of a poet! I couldn’t go on living like this. Why should I go on living like this?
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