Friday, March 5, 2010

Chicago

Great to be in Chicago during the St. Patrick's Day season...Honora wondered at the end of Galway Bay if Amerikay would swallow up the Irish. Well don't worry, Honora, we're alive and well and celebrating our identity. I'm in Manhattan, IL west of Chicago. I helped kick off their Irish Fest. My friends the Cunningham’s have roots there and it seems I've connected to so many of my events through friends and family. And wow the word is really spreading. Thanks to Rick Kogan, chronicler of all things Chicago, who interviewed me on his WGN radio show Sun. Feb 28 along with Dave Samber. Dave's made his Polo Cafe in Bridgeport (where the Kelly’s settled) Galway Bay Central. Rick's questions show such respect and understanding for a writer's work. Of course he's a writer and so knows. Everybody in Chicago must listen to him judging from the many people at events who say "I heard you on Rick!"

I felt very honored to attend a ceremony that finally honored the first Chicago policeman killed in the line of duty, Constable James Quinn. He died in 1853 but his story had been forgotten until Rick Barrett and Skinny Sheahan got on the case. See the Chicago Tribune for the whole story. Had a chance to talk to Mayor Daley who said he and his wife had read and enjoyed Galway Bay. Very gratifying!

A full house at Indian Prairie library where Cindy Kline, who is a friend of my cousin Sheila, put together a great event. My other cousin Carol's daughter Maggie, 12, invited me to her school which was fun. Her class was full of ideas and question about writing.

Last night was magical too. Marti Wendt Doherty, whose brother George (you might know him as Norm in Cheers) was in the same Second City cast as my sister Nancy McCabe Kelly and brother-in-law Bruce Jarchow hosted a fund raiser at her amazing house for her parish school Christ the King. A copy of Galway Bay and high tea with me came with a donation to the Christ the King Foundation. Everything Irish--Waterford crystal, Beleek China, handmade dolls, Celtic art-- shone. But brightest were the 60 or more women gathered. Very emotional for me to talk to a group that so appreciated the Galway Bay story, which in many ways is the story of every family.

And Mrs. Wendt, matriarch of the clan, told me after my talk "I like your sense of humor. You know how to slip them in. And that's the best complement I can give anyone!" Wow!! Her family comes from Mayo. Now that's the Chicago Irish spirit!! No wonder I'm so happy to be home.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Happy Spring!

In Ireland snowdrops and primroses are blooming and the Celtic calendar says Imbolc - Spring – which began on February 1st, St. Brigid's Feast. Both blacksmiths and poets claim the great Irishwoman as their patron which seems appropriate to me as I work on the sequel to Galway Bay. Sometimes as I write I do feel as if I'm hammering away. But then I think of you. Readers! You're my reward! Because of you Galway Bay is in its fourth printing. THANKS.

Could I ask a favor? St. Patrick's Day turns booksellers' attention towards things Irish. Would you please encourage a book store near you to add copies of Galway Bay to their St. Patrick's Day displays? I've found that individual managers do respond when asked to stock the book. And, as always you can buy Galway Bay on Amazon or through my website as a St. Patrick's Day Gift for a favorite Irish Person.

Also, I'll be doing a number of events during the St. Patrick's Day season, for more information check for dates and times here.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Galway Bay in its Fourth Printing

Grand Central Publishing has issued a fourth printing of Galway Bay, just in time for stores to start ordering for Saint Patrick's Day. I'll have lots of fun events around that time, check back here for more information on events and book signings. Also as noted in an earlier blog, I will be leading a Galway Bay tour to Ireland April 27 to May 7. Let me know if you're interested. You can email me here. SLAINTE!

Friday, December 11, 2009

Irish College Day at Sacred Heart University

Saturday November 7th. I spoke at the second annual Irish College Day at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Conn sponsored by The Wild Geese. I will keep you informed about new events sponsored by them.

Also, I will be leading a Galway Bay tour to Ireland April 27 to May 7. Let me know if you're interested. You can email me here.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Villanova University

I was at another great Catholic University, Villanova with Professor James Murphy, head of the Irish Studies Program. We talked about the incredible achievements of the Irish Augustinians who founded Villanova in the 1840's. How did they do it? How did the Holy Cross Fathers at Notre Dame manage or the Sisters of Providence at St Mary-of-the Woods. Pioneers all and full of those who had escaped oppression and the Great Starvation and then had gone right on create these institutions. Such determination. I guess the hunger for education among the Irish immigrants, who'd been forbidden by law to go to school, was as strong as the need for food and shelter and work.

At Villanova I heard the students in Professor Murphy's class talk with passion about Queen Maeve and Sweeney, the Chieftain Seamus Heaney made so real in Sweeney Astray. The old stories in this new setting--alive. How happy our ancestors must be!

At my presentation we had a Galway Bay moment. I was talking about how a sister at the Presentation Convent in Galway had helped me and the odd coincidence that two of her aunts had left Donegal in the 1880's and joined the Sisters of Providence in Indiana, the community in which I had spent six years. A man raised his hand. "Was the name MacNaillis?" he asked." Yes!" He was a cousin and had heard the story though he didn't know Sister Maire in Galway. Made me think of connections and cousins I have discovered. Did I write about the astounding moment when I met cousins I had never known existed at a book signing at the parish I where I grew up-- Queen of All Saints? If not it's because I'm still reeling. Nicole and her aunt Mary Anne Grennan and uncle Tom Grennan came up at the end. They are the descendants of Luke Kelly, the brother of my great grandmother Bridget Kelly who married Patrick Kelly. A Kelly marrying a Kelly. We had a fine reunion and then they brought other cousins to meet my Aunt Marge Kelly McGuire who is now the most senior member of the Clan and the only one from that generation. We have only begun to connect those dots!

After Villanova I signed at the Warrington Borders. That invitation came from Jim Dowling who I met on Cape Cod because he is a friend of Elizabeth Merrill who hosted me when I signed at her book store Titcombs where a dear friend from Connecticut Dick Whitcomb brought his friend who turned out to be a cousin who girls I went to High school with in Chicago. Got it? Do you see why my blogging lags behind?

Chicago and Notre Dame

I was signing "Merry Christmas" at the great Celtic New Year gathering of writers, artists and musicians in ChicagoIBAM-- Irish Books Art Music-- that Cliff Carlson, publisher of a number of Irish American newspapers, put together a Celtic New Year celebration with dozens of author, musicians, dancers and artists at the Irish American Heritage Center with its beautiful new ballroom. That's such a wonderful place and I have gotten to know so many volunteers there as well as the new director Tim McDonnell, Malachy and Alphie McCourt were there from New York and commented on the warm welcome Chicago people give visitors. One of the best parts of Galway Bay is spending so much time in my home town.

That week before I spoke to the Celtic Women at the Heritage Center and had a wonderful evening at the Polo Cafe in Bridgeport (Galway Bay central) with 60 members of book clubs from the area parishes and topped it off with a lovely afternoon with the Irish American teachers. I stayed that week at the Polo Cafe's bed and breakfast hosted by the amazing Dave Samber and was able to walk the streets my ancestors knew so well and get the feel of the neighborhood as I research material for the sequel.

Dave also spearheaded two events at nearby St. James Parish. We showed Proud, the movie I wrote and directed which told the story of the men of the USS Mason, the only African American sailors to take a US Navy warship into combat during WW II. (Check Proudthemovie.com and USSMason.org) It stars Ossie Davis (his last movie). He plays the real Mason sailor Lorenzo Dufau and Mr. Dufau was with us there in Chicago! The students attending the daytime screening loved him and so did the adults at night. We even were featured on ABC news.

Mr Dufau and I had been in Buffalo that weekend where Proud was featured in the Buffalo International Film Festival. We shot the movie in Buffalo so it was a homecoming. Two actors from the film-Ron Mangum and Willie Faulkner attended. The next day Mary Heneghan and her son Tom whose store The Tara Gift Shop is at the heart of Buffalo's Irish Community arranged a signing for me at a unique book store Dog Ears, just down Abbott Street the neighborhood where the street signs are in Irish and a statue of Chauncey Alcott in front of Buffalo's Irish Center watches over his birthplace. A happy day.

And then I entered a sacred space that from childhood meant Irish to me--The University of Notre Dame. I signed books in the Notre Dame book store the day of the Notre Dame-Boston College Game. Talk about Irish Pride. Nothing like hearing the band play the fight song followed by a jig and watching thousands of students in the stands dance along. Met so many friends. Tailgated with Rose Durkin Snyder, whose been a huge support. She'd joined my childhood friend Barbara Leahy Sutton, a St. Mary of Notre Dame's graduate, in helping me at my table in the book store. Roe is amazing. Her enthusiasm pulled people in. They had to buy!!

Writing

November now and I am far behind in this blog. I am writing a piece
for Irish America magazine about my travels so that eases my mind a
little. Arrived in California last night and saw Julie/Julia on the
plane which made me resolve to update this blog. Watching the movie
filled me with gratitude that I am a writer and that Galway Bay is out
there being read. When I was writing away with my fine point black
Papermate pen on legal sized narrow-ruled yellow pads (not easy to
find!!) at 5am I hoped (and prayed) that readers would find and be
moved by the story. And now I meet people who do appreciate Galway
Bay at every stop.