The speaker in these poems has what classic romantic comedies once dubbed spunk, moxie, or class. She’s a wise woman/ super babe/ bartendress/ foolish virgin/ small screen starlet. She’s part Lauren Bacall, part Nancy Drew, part Powerpuff girl. Her fantasies and adventures are touching and comic. You’ll want to meet This Blonde, as she wrestles skeptically with received notions of romance, men, the workplace, faith, being trapped in an elevator. She’s wistful/ flirty/ resourceful/ pert/ thirsty/ philosophical…with, yes, a heart of gold.
--Amy Gerstler
With tenderness and panache, Nicole Hardy bares her blonde ambition, from holy roots to platinum dazzle: "In each blue-funk Sabbath possession/I'm the small screen starlet, sand-stranded/beyond the fishnet rescue/of an evening gown." Waitressing, dating, going to church, scripting her made-for-TV movie, her speaker is sweetly carnal, alertly intelligent, tart but compassionate, hungry but patient, "trained to wait as long as it takes/for the secrets." In its rueful bravura, This Blonde is a fresh delight.
-Karen Volkman
One opens this book excited, as if seeing Marilyn Monroe for the first time. Hardy uses popular culture like lipstick and she knows how to kiss. This Blonde is fun reading and very seductive.
- E. Ethelbert Miller
December, 2010
Featured Reader, Plop! Reading and Performance Series
December, 2010
Where Treetops Glisten: A Bittersweet Holiday in Four Acts
May, 2010
Featured Reader, 5th Anniversary Celebration, Cheap Wine and Poetry
August, 2010
Featured Reader, Seattle Art Walk, Sponsored by Gallery 40
May, 2010
Private reading, Cathedral Ave., Washington DC
April, 2010
Reading at Village Books in Bellingham, Wa with poets Marjorie Manwaring and Jeremy Voigt
April, 2010
Dead Poets Society sponsored by Richard Hugo House. Performing as Anne Sexton
March, 2010
What a Lovely Way to Burn, with Willow and the Embers, Jewelbox Theater
Press/Reviews
City Arts Magazine
Hugo House Presents Dead Poet's Society