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  August 2004
Columns
volume 2 number 3
 
  home   (archived)
 
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Laura A. Lionello
Raining Cats and Dogs - Interview with Raindog
  essayist
Julia Bemiss
In response to Patrick Mooney's School of Thought
  reviewer
Marie Lecrivain
Ivan Smason's Jazz Boy
  reviewer
Francisco Dominguez
Aire Celeste Norell's The Ugly Duckling & Other American Tragedies
 
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Francisco Dominguez August 2004
   

 

Aire Celeste Norell's The Ugly Duckling & Other American Tragedies

     Much of the essence in The Ugly Duckling & Other American Tragedies lies in the author’s attempt to share the multiple facets of herself. Aire Celeste Norell manages, throughout the length of this collection to weave her social views (animal rights among some) and insights from her personal sexual experiences with surprising ease.
    Yet, as strong as these two themes are pronounced, neither draws attention away from the rest of her work. Other poems deal in themes of family, neighborhood-watching and pet ownership - pertaining perhaps not only to cat owners, but pet owners in general.
    What's most striking about The Ugly Duckling is Norell's ability to juxtapose her serious explorations with a self-aware, lighthearted, and witty resignation as in the poem 'The Married Woman:'

        I want to keep dating
        -not for a new relationship
        -not for sex
        but so I can become a part of more people’s
        emotional baggage

        I want to wet myself in the flood of men (and women!)
        who will answer my ad-“sexy librarian type seeks…”

and

        I want to tell my life story
        To someone who’s never heard it
        Who listens with the attentiveness
        Only someone hoping to get laid
        Can give me

and

        I’ll order everything on the side
        And eat everything

        I’ll sing along to the radio
        Change stations until I find hip hop
        Then switch to country
        Then opera

        And I’ll leave the instant I’m no longer
        Having fun

    Norell knows what she writes are serious and controversial themes, but she’d rather not bring the reader down with heavy introspection and often-used social clichés. Instead, she uses playful characterization to express her sentiments-a far less traveled but just as rewarding path.


Aire Celeste Norell is a native Californian who has also lived in Massachusetts and Oregon. She earned a B.A. in Sociology from the University of California at Santa Cruz. Shortly after being declared an "instant favorite" by the Redondo Poets, she appeared as a featured poet both at the 'Two Idiots Peddling Poetry' reading in Orange and at WorldFest 2003.

Her work also appears in the December 2003 issue of The Blue House and on her website.
www.aireceleste.com

(The Ugly Duckling & Other American Tragedies, 2003 Aire Celeste Norell, 32 pages)

copyright 2004 Francisco Dominguez

   


Francisco Dominguez


author's bio

Francisco J. Dominguez emigrated from Mexico to the United States at the age of 13. Since then, he has written and published a book of poetry, Estranged by the Airfields of Vienna. Fran's creative work is mostly comprised of short prose and free verse. As an immigrant, his endeavors are based on an outside-looking-in perspective. Fran is the art editor for poeticdiversity, and has been writing poetry for more than 10 years. He lives in Long Beach, California.

www.room-208.com