1633 6 3
|
A week ago, Lina had felt a pain crack over her right eyebrow. It was there every day, creeping from her ear to the middle of her forehead.
|
1633 2 0
|
It is a dark and stormy night, naturally
We’re trying to get some sleep
at a Travelodge in Eureka
when I get up at 3 a.m. to write
“Hard motel pillow receives snoring from neighboring room”
O Thesaurus, we need another word
Maybe it sh
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1633 10 4
|
I do this when I think of you. Today we took the first steps towards you're never here.
|
1633 20 11
|
The nearsighted world/
puts on its lenses
|
1633 8 8
|
that doesn't need any words to arrive fully formed, or too many words to be believed in at all I should say, a little something we can simply send back and forth across your time and my space without having to talk at length about it, but being a …
|
1633 23 12
|
We know them just enough/
to recognize them when we find them.
|
1633 2 2
|
...you should pick a VERY OLD millionaire. Very old, and NOT VERY WELL...
|
1633 4 2
|
Something was changing.
We could sense it in the circling air. A loss of stillness - and we'd been still for so long.
|
1633 12 7
|
Foolish boy, you chose
your parents poorly-
|
1633 3 2
|
The night we broke into Bron-yr-Aur it was too cold to make love. I said I wasn't horny anyway. You put your hand on my forehead: Are you ill?
|
1633 4 3
|
|
1632 6 1
|
You look at people
and despise them all.
|
1632 9 6
|
I held her hand through two divorces, I warned her that gorgeous Geoffrey was homosexual when she was oblivious, and I fed her children when she was off at rehab (four times before it 'took').
|
1632 6 2
|
Eddie meets Sarah Packard, a “college girl” played by Piper Laurie. She walks with a limp, a fact Eddie doesn’t notice at first because she’s sitting down at a diner table in a bus station. She’s alcoholic and writes poetry.
|
1632 8 2
|
13 rooks on a lifeless tree
|
1632 7 4
|
He calls it an owl glass: he’s allowed: he’s six.
|
1632 0 0
|
...the fatal bleeding-out of the love receptors. They call it “Juliet's Tears.”
|
1632 7 5
|
If the Titanic rises from the bottom of the sea,
I will meet you on deck, in a deck chair.
Fully dressed for a change.
|
1632 3 3
|
By February, I had decided,
That you'd tear out my throat every morning
if it meant your favorite song would play from my neck.
|
1632 9 7
|
a girl with wolves, dogs and a bear
|
1632 7 2
|
I must have been six years old at that time, but the events of…
|
1632 8 6
|
Our afterlife depends upon//
what interesting shape
|
1632 6 4
|
This Tippy’s name was Cheryl — something both of them were so far not committing to paper or saying. Unusual in a salesman, she thought. He is insincere and intends to sell her something.
|
1632 8 8
|
“I won't live here,” Beth said, waving her hand to indicate the small Southern town in which they were having dinner—the most delicious fried chicken either of them had ever tasted—in a restaurant located in an antebellum mansion. She looked…
|
1631 3 3
|
|
1631 5 2
|
This is Peter’s office. The room is small, and the wood paneling is painted white. Light colors, Peter has been told, make a room appear larger.
|
1631 4 2
|
There was a small slanted hole through the edge of the door, and another one in the door frame. She pushed the door closed to check. The holes matched up.
|
1631 6 5
|
The clarinet and the accordion are brothers, I see. Big, fat men with curly, klezmer hair.
|
1631 9 3
|
You looked like someone I didn't want to know. I guess that's why I got in the car that night. My penchant for self-destruction was aroused by your black nail polish and the lavender circles under your eyes. You looked like someone that could hurt me, yeah, that's why I got…
|
1631 2 2
|
I look down at my free of clothing genitalia and curiously note that the testicles sprout from above my erect penis, and my scrotum is so taut, hard and shriveled as to conjure squished images of a gigantic pink peanut.
|