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An Irish American story in La Cañada

The sibling of a noted local trails advocate will be here to sign copies of her book, “Galway Bay.”

April 02, 2009|By Ruth Longoria

If you grew up watching the soap opera “Ryan’s Hope” and enjoy getting ensconced in a good Irish family drama, you won’t want to miss an upcoming event at Flintridge Bookstore and Coffeehouse, 964 Foothill Blvd., in La Cañada.

It will be almost like an Irish family reunion as author Mary Pat Kelly — sister to La Cañada resident and trails advocate Randy (Kelly) Strapazon — shows up at 7:30 p.m., April 23 to autograph and discuss her current novel, “Galway Bay.”

The book is being received by Kelly’s readers and peers with enthusiasm and appreciation.

“As they say in Ireland, ‘take your ease with this book.’ You’ll need time for laughter and tears and pure magic,” wrote Frank McCourt, the Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of the novel “Angela’s Ashes.”

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Kelly will spend a few weeks in La Cañada with her sister, after completing book-signing events in Boston, New York, Washington, D.C. and Chicago. The tour was launched earlier this month in Ireland in the home of Irish Ambassador Michael Collins.

In addition to the La Cañada stop on Kelly’s tour, while in the area she will sign books at the UCLA Festival of Books and at Holy Family Bookstore in South Pasadena, before continuing the tour with events in Orange and San Diego counties and San Francisco. For more information on the tour, visit www.marypatkelly.com.

“Galway Bay” tells the historical fiction account of Kelly’s great-great-grandmother, Honora Keely Kelly, beginning with life in early 1800s Ireland and chronicling events and struggles as she and her family make their way to Chicago in the 1890s.

“Our family is from Chicago, and while we knew some facts about our relatives, Mary Pat was the first one to trace our ancestors and put it all together,” Strapazon said, adding that her father, Michael Kelly, was orphaned at 13 and he and his four sisters were reared by their Aunt Rose.

“The Kellys lost everything during the Great Depression. No one wanted to speak about those days, or what had come before, as they could hardly be considered good times,” Strapazon said.

Following one stop on the book tour, Honora Kelly was described by the Chicago Tribune as “the grandmother of Chicago politics,” because her grandson, Ed Kelly, was important to that city’s history as mayor from 1932 to 1947.

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