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Notes for My Body DoublePoemsFrom"Questions for Godzilla"
…what of the glowing spine,
what of the toy stings of stock footage flames,
what of the jets you swatted dead
from the air with unmistakable joy,
you of the plastic-leather, pebbled Pleistocene flesh,
you of the palsied fury, you
of the put-upon by dissemblers and disturbers,
you, what of the life burned
so cheaply into celluloid we are charmed…
Notes for My Body Double : Poems -
Notes for My Body DoublePoemsFrom"These Arms of Mine"
Imagine if each time we kissed
my ear fell off. If the morning
was not so much for brushing
the fog of the night from the mouth,
but reassembly. You might go
out into the day with my bad ankle.
I’d never hear the end.
Notes for My Body Double : Poems -
Notes for My Body DoublePoemsFrom"Hunger"
Let’s eat something no sane person would eat
and in the dark with our zealous fingers
like savages. Each rich subterranean rind
or wheel of cheese we’ll pretend
to fluently call forth from greater darkness
than this. Avatars of avarice, open
mouth to sautéed cephalopods
and crusted crustaceans and bivalves over braziers,
let’s swell until the dawn
like storm clouds, like stomachs, like stolid
hunger.
Notes for My Body Double : Poems
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The WildingA Novel
“You see my grandson over there.” Justin’s father humps his chin in Graham’s direction without taking his eyes off Seth. “You don’t want him to see what the inside of your skull looks like, do you?”
“You’d never do that,” Seth says. “I could walk right up to that rifle and stick my finger in it and you’d never do a thing.”
“Come on and try.”
“You’re so full of it.”
Then his father swings the barrel left and fires. The crack of the gunshot is followed by the chime of glass shattering, falling from the red pickup, its left headlight destroyed.
For a moment Seth stares at his truck. “You’ll fucking pay for that,” he says.
The Wilding : A Novel -
The WildingA Novel
Justin watches him in silence. There is something in his son’s face. A tightening of his jaw and a flaring of his nostrils that foretells what will come. He isn’t going to ask permission. He is going to shoot. It makes him seem faraway and unfamiliar. He is so enchanted by the desire to kill—the same acute and forceful feeling that drove primitive man to bring a blade of obsidian to a stick and sharpen it—that his current life, his school and his bicycle and his bedroom with the desk scored from the snarl of his pencil and the giant beer mug filled with brown pennies and the movie-monster posters hanging on the wall, has become nothing but a tiny black fly he brushes aside with his hand before bringing it to the stock and tightening his finger around the trigger.
The Wilding : A Novel -
The WildingA Novel
Justin waits for him to say something more and soon he does, when walking about the campsite, kicking through its remains. “Bears don’t unscrew a jar of peanut butter. They don’t unpeel a stick of jerky. Bears don’t drink a Pabst Blue Ribbon and neither do I.” He peers around the cooler and knocks closed its lid. “And bears don’t steal whiskey.”
The Wilding : A Novel