I'm rewriting some of the poems in  Things You Can Do With a Sharpened Pencil, cutting out a lot of the crap, finally adding PAGE NUMBERS, contemplating entering it in the writer's digest best self-published book contest, though the entrance fee is $100.
Here's one of the rewrites:
Diary of a Thief 
19, I was skinny and small, wore shirts over shirts over shirts, skirts, 
sweaters, bit my fingernails fucked anyone who asked, the first time 
away from a house where no one knew how to kiss without tongue 
when I wasn’t drinking or fucking another boy who reeked of pine fresh, 
I lived in our college library, a cathedral of blackened 
cinnamon wood, the angels books, helpless blind and flat 
one Saturday night I crammed myself into the book elevator and up 
behind locked doors, fresh chainlink and bars, a famous poet, you 
would know his name, the only copy of his thesis-- I took it down with me 
the paper like baby skin, transparent, elusive, pages fed a manual 
typewriter in the days of carbon paper, I took 
it and almost the Degas sculpture, the signed Emily 
Dickinson letters, the rare things we hide because some objects shimmer 
so they melt in sunlight or too much viewing
I took those pages, I touched them, the hand drawn illustrations, 
I kept it with my books on a darkened desk
for one week imagining the thousands it could get me or how to take 
it to my breast and suckle it, make it my own, basking in the shine 
around my head from having such a valuable thing, 
I put it back
for years I have done this, the trespass, the baroque plans with valuables 
that seem suddenly (mine) and for years I have only touched, returned,
I have regretted things caressed and left, the Chagall drawing
the Monets, but this spring I finally saw it as a talent, I can enter a private chamber, uncover without stripping what gleams and is hidden, 
touch without molding to the shape of my mouth, I can return 
it unkissed, unbroken, give back what belongs and it was spring 
when it finally hit me
now I can be a mother 
 
 
 
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