1647 2 1
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Boys start fires all the time— it's a rite of passage— so when your father gives you the task of setting fire to the family's trash, you don't mind, and when the flames ignite inside the old dishwasher he heaved into the woods behind the house, you…
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1647 10 9
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What grabbed the mind when you heard about it was the way he did it.
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1647 6 2
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I took a lover on Ibiza either because he was clean-smelling or because he had a hotel room and there were none to be had.
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1647 3 2
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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?
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1646 8 2
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13 rooks on a lifeless tree
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1646 0 0
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"You've fallen out of love with me, is that it? That you'll leave me for another girl, who has bigger boobs and fucks you better than I do."
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1646 0 0
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...the fatal bleeding-out of the love receptors. They call it “Juliet's Tears.”
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1646 4 1
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In mid dream, mid journey, there's a barrier we must cross, flat and vast like an ocean. We're told the barrier is a monster. To cross the barrier we must maim one of its eyes. There, rising to the surface is half a large…
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1646 6 3
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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.
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1646 8 8
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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 …
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1646 4 3
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1646 10 6
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The trees would answer with a creak and a crackle.
Fall was near, a rotten apple.
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1645 6 6
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some answers are enough to make you cry or laugh yourself to death
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1645 7 4
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I wonder how many crumbs
he can drop to make a cookie,
whole, so I can relax a little
and throw out the self help books
about how I'm not right in
the motherfucking head,
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1645 12 6
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"Every generation is a new generation, isn't it? What's so different about your generation?"
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1645 1 0
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He first saw her stepping off a water taxi by the Long Docks in the rain at night, her right arm atrophied from some early childhood disease, dangling like an apology, her other holding a cigarette. Her wet black hair hung past her shoulders and her eyes
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1645 8 6
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remembering Cahokia, a place we rent near the water's edge, for we dare not enter
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1645 5 3
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She worked the research desk. Like most ladies before computers and cell-phones she lead a quiet conservative life. She wore dresses, spent time with family and friends...Emma also had been stricken as a child
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1645 6 6
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israeli flares light gaza/ casting incandescent nudity/ upon jumbled puzzle piece buildings.
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1645 2 2
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...you should pick a VERY OLD millionaire. Very old, and NOT VERY WELL...
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1645 0 0
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There were echoes all around them, their shadows delirious and only existed in short spurts under the breath of the streetlights. They danced as their cigarettes leaked calligraphy across the night sky and she tried to trace it with her finger. He asked her what it said…
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1645 4 2
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Something was changing.
We could sense it in the circling air. A loss of stillness - and we'd been still for so long.
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1645 6 2
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Sometimes one person's shelter is another person's storm.
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1645 3 3
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1645 11 12
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Regrets lined behind him like crossties on a railroad track.
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1644 7 6
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In human rights, a man and a woman may marry and bring forth a family. It is a civil right in the U.S. but not a human right (as far as I know) to raise a child singly without the knowledge of the other parent.
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1644 12 5
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the memories return like they do every year at this time
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1644 6 5
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One of the poems in my collection, One Day Tells its Tale to Another, published December 16, 2012. Available on Amazon. My first book!
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1644 2 2
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Past the pavilion, past the factory, past the underside of the bridge where the surfers jimmy their sloppy fingers over the oil barrels.
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1644 0 0
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Under the darkness of their new city. The heave and moan of structures as they breathed and pulsed. Under the darkness of this city, under the hum of their florescent bulbs and the tumbling rattle of motorcars, the wheeze of their machines and the clank o
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