A Stilt of Daddy Longlegs

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  Call it that, this hatch or migration around the campfire pit, so that they ascend our own long legs, and we catch a glimpse of them or their shadows scrambling over our knees, and worse yet feel them on … Read More

On Hatred

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  Forty minutes south of here the foliage changes, and forty minutes more there are armadillos, which are adorable and carry leprosy. At the rest area the thick nylon divider between urinals is cut with swastikas, same thing at the … Read More

Dear Jeff Bezos,

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  Rich guys liking space is such a huge cliché that I won’t ask about Blue Origins or your Picard costume. I’d rather talk about the Clock of the Long Now you’re building in Texas, how it’s meant to mark … Read More

Moving to a Tourist Town

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  Grove Park Inn Summer afternoon, the Great Hall’s cool dark felt like entering a cave. Refreshing but ghostly— an all-knowing chill from those thick granite walls, four-and-a-half feet deep, 100 years old. I watched wealthy guests dine on the … Read More

Biologies

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  A professor and a doctor walk onto a farm to measure the mechanical pressure and heat surrounding the inflated carcass of a cloud decomposing on the ground by a tractor. From time to time, they can make out the … Read More

Peaches

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  We were on the grass in the back of the palace snacking on rare songbirds when Jerónimo sprouted peaches out of his fingernails. The peaches made him look large and threatening, and in the early morning and dusk, he … Read More

Kinesthesia

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  As if to say a body discovers what the mind can never comprehend, my son Jonas is always asking, “Who invented numbers?” “What do you mean?” What does he mean? “Not its shape, the line, like ‘l’ or ‘I’ … Read More

Steer Skull on the Minnesota

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  South Dakota border. Brown mule stirs up dust, leopard frogs disrupt blue stem. Cicadas, their long songs, comfort, hush and darken the wind-broken groves. We walk the deer path along the ditch side, dusk. Stems of wheat bow. The … Read More

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