| Great, luv that. Here's another one I really like by Kim Addonizio, sharp and ironic and true: 
 DEAD GIRLS
 
 
 
 show up often in the movies, facedown
 
 in the weeds beside the highway.
 
 Kids find them by the river, or in the woods,
 
 
 
 under leaves, one pink-nailed hand thrust up.
 
 Detectives stand over them in studio apartments
 
 or lift their photos off pianos
 
 
 
 in the houses they almost grew up in.
 
 A dead girl can kick a movie into gear
 
 better than a saloon brawl, better
 
 
 
 than a factory explosion, just
 
 by lying there. Anyone can play her,
 
 any child off the street
 
 
 
 can be hog-tied and dumped from a van
 
 or strangled blue in a kitchen, a bathroom,
 
 an alley, a school. That’s the beauty
 
 
 
 of a dead girl. Even a plain one
 
 who feels worthless
 
 as a clod of dirt, broken
 
 
 
 by the sorrow of gazing all day
 
 at a fashion magazine,
 
 can be made whole, redeemed
 
 
 
 by what she finally can’t help being,
 
 the center of attention, the special,
 
 desirable, dead, dead girl.
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