Blond Angels
by
Book Details
About the Book
Blond Angels is the name of this book of poetry: Blond, like the golden plains and hills of
In its preface, this book of English/Spanish poetry exhibits how it’s been perceived by the Mexican poet Humberto Murillo Díaz:
“A lo largo del texto literario se entrelazan, cadena milagrosa, el amor a los seres y las cosas, la soledad del hombre en su abandono, el dolor y la muerte. Y así debe de ser porque al poeta, nada le es ajeno; la visión de este mundo que lo aterra, igualmente lo salva y lo sostiene a pesar de la víscera dolida. Cuida en su corazón la mano amiga, el saludo colmado de esperanzas, la expresión amigable de un poema a las dos de la aurora. Leer los versos del poeta-hermano, es volver al recato de la hora profunda, al místico silencio donde vibran las cuerdas musicales de la poesía inaudita, clara y definitiva, ésa donde no faltan ni sobran los aliños”.
About the Author
Ernesto Oregel —Mexican by birth and German by last name and ascendance— is presently a Visiting Professor at Salem State College, Massachusetts, where he has been teaching Spanish and Italian since 1998. As an adolescent and teenager, he was exposed to English, Greek, Italian, Latin and, later on, he advanced his learning them in college, including French, German, Hebrew, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian —classical and modern languages: his second love—. As a high-school and college learner, reading and translating Homer, Virgil, Dante, among many others, Ernesto strengthened his first love —poetry—, burst in his soul at the age of 14. During his first four years of college at Instituto Filosófico Salesiano —Guadalajara City, Mexico— where he attended the Facultad de Filosofía y Letras and graduated in 1957, Ernesto enlightened the form and spirit of his verses. In January of 1960, after three years of teaching experience in Guadalajara, Saltillo, and Querétaro cities, Ernesto started his graduate and postgraduate last four years of college in his native country at Instituto Teológico Salesiano, near Mexico City, where his poetic creativity grew deeper and stronger, reaching new dimensions. As a theology graduate student, Ernesto spent his summers, during these four years, majoring in Lengua y Literatura at Escuela Normal Superior F.E.P. in Writing poetry was his first love. Writing prose would be a friendly and helpful companion. So Ernesto decided to take a curso práctico de periodismo y redacción por correspondencia from Escuela de Periodismo Carlos Septién García in It was during this time that Ernesto had also the opportunity to meet a few times with Alfonso Junco, a well-known Creole poet, historian, and prose writer, who advised and encouraged the young poet to keep reading and writing. In 1968 Ernesto moved to