Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Amori honored by publisher

The Abington Journal
February 15, 2009


Amori honored by publisher

(Right) Alyssa Amori of Clarks Summit, author of "Scranton: The Electric City," received a certificate of recognition for her book from her publisher (left) Nicole Langan of Tribute Books in Archbald. Amori was a finalist in the 2008 National Best Book Awards in the "Photography - General" category. The certificate was presented at Amori's First Friday featured exhibit at the STAR Gallery in the Mall at Steamtown on Friday, Feb 6, 2009. For more information, visit: http://www.usabooknews.com/bestbooksawards2008.html

Monday, February 23, 2009

Around the Towns - Clarks Summit

The Scranton Times-Tribune
February 22, 2009


Around the Towns - Clarks Summit
by Stacey Solie

Photographer Alyssa Amori was named one of four finalists for the USA Best Books Award for "Scranton: The Electric City," a collection of photos.

The idea for the book came to her while watching Oprah. The talk-show host went on a cross-country road trip but drove right through Scranton. Ms. Amori joked that she should show Ms. Winfrey what she missed, so she started taking pictures. She was put in touch with a local publisher, Tribute Books of Archbald. Ms. Amori took 6,000 photos and whittled them to 125.

“I was a finalist, and that’s fine by me. I will take that category any day. ... I’m very pleased,” she said.

Friday, February 20, 2009

People on the Move

The Valley Advantage
February 20, 2009


People on the Move

Andrea Nepa is the author of the book "Red in the Flower Bed," which explains the interracial adoption process for young readers. Andrea lives with her adopted daughter Leah and her husband, David in Haddonfield, NJ. David is originally from Archbald and graduated from Valley View and the University of Scranton. His father, Felix Nepa, is a resident of Archbald.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Mother explains interracial adoption with book

Abington Journal
February 4, 2009


Mother explains interracial adoption with book

Tribute Books announces the release of "Red in the Flower Bed" by Andrea Nepa. The picture book explains the interracial adoption process for young readers. Nepa is an adoptive mother. She adopted her daughter, Leah, from Vietnam in 2001.

The book tells the journey of adoption depicted with the comforting imagery of a poppy flower who is welcomed into a garden family. It is a charming story of "seeds" being planted in the perfect place - exactly where they belong. The book's loving approach helps children to understand adoption.

The book has already received a lot of positive attention.

"What a charming story of "seeds" being planted in the perfect place, exactly where they belong," said LeAnn Thieman, co-author of "Chicken Soup for the Adopted Soul."

Above, author Andrea Nepa and daughter, Leah.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Author Mary Garrity Slaby (pen name Molly Roe) at Barnes & Noble Wilkes-Barre

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lyp7PEXFqoI

Area author puts history into novel

Times Leader
February 9, 2009


Area author puts history into novel - "Call Me Kate" writer signs copies of her book at downtown Barnes & Noble.
by Glenda Joy Race

Mary Garrity Slabby is a local teacher and author who finds that "the personal connection to history makes learning relevant."

On Saturday, Slabby appeared at the Barnes & Noble in downtown Wilkes-Barre for a signing of her historically themed and locally relevant book "Call Me Kate," written under the name Molly Roe.

The signing was one of a series of Molly Roe book events in Northeastern Pennsylvania.

Molly Roe is the pen name that Slabby chose to link her to her ancestral homeland, Ireland. Her genealogical research also led her to write her story about the poor, the scapegoated and a problem for which there was no easy answer.

The author’s main character in the book, Kate, is a 14-year-old girl living in Pennsylvania in the midst of the American Civil War. After her father is paralyzed in a mining accident, Kate disguises herself as a male draft-resister and tries to stop the draft train headed to Harrisburg.

Avoiding the draft in those days was not necessarily a sign of a lack of patriotism. It could be an act of economic necessity.

During the Civil War, the draft of one male family member could mean eviction, hunger or other severe financial hardships for the rest of the family.

Through "Call Me Kate," the reader also learns about the Molly Maguires. The term "Molly Maguire" originally was used in Ireland, where the "Sons of the Molly Maguires" was a group formed against the unfair eviction of tenants. In America, the Maguires are associated with fair treatment and fair wages for coal miners during a portion of the 1800s but were regarded by mine owners and authorities as criminals.

The term was later used by 19th-century Pottsville newspaper editor Benjamin Bannan, who "put the tag" on other Irish immigrants. Soon virtually any crime in the area became associated with the Maguires, often to make Irish people with "too much" political influence appear guilty of wrongdoing.

The author noted research for this book was done mostly in Pottsville, with some additional resources from the Bishop Library in Wilkes-Barre.

Melissa Parry, one of the people who met with the author at the Barnes & Noble event, said it was fun to put oneself "in the era."

Slaby also related the story of Kate picking up coal for heat for her family to an audience of children.

"Call Me Kate," which sold out at Saturday’s event, is available at tribute-books.com, amazon.com, barnes&noble.com, borders.com or can be ordered at any bookstore.

ABOVE: Molly Roe, aka Mary Garrity Slabby, signs a copy of her book, "Call Me Kate," for Belle Vermac, 7, at the Barnes & Noble, South Main Street in Wilkes-Barre, Saturday morning.

Around The Towns - Eynon

Scranton Times-Tribune
February 8, 2009


Around The Towns - Eynon
by Gretchen Wintermantel

At 29, Nicole Langan never really expected to start a publishing business. She was working designing heirloom books for families under private commission.

"The demand was there to expand into the wider realm of becoming an independent publisher," Ms. Langan said.

Ms. Langan started Tribute Books in 2004. The company, which publishes mainly local authors, has 26 titles to date.

Ms. Langan graduated from Marywood University with a bachelor’s degree in English and communications in 2001.

Teacher writes novel on Molly Maguires for young readers

Citizens Voice
February 7, 2009


Teacher writes novel on Molly Maguires for young readers
by Caleb Sheaffer

More than a decade of genealogical research went into Dallas resident Mary Garrity Slaby’s new book, "Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires." But it is not a standard history book full of facts and figures.

Rather Slaby, under her pen name Molly Roe, wrote "Call Me Kate" as a novel for young adults to pique their interest in the rich history of Northeastern Pennsylvania.

Saturday, Slaby will be at Wilkes/King’s Barnes & Noble Bookstore on South Main Street in Wilkes-Barre from noon to 2 p.m., to sign books and discuss "Call Me Kate."

Slaby knows her audience well because of her day job. She teaches seventh- and eighth-grade language arts at Lake-Lehman Junior-Senior High School.

At Lake-Lehman, Slaby often has her students bring in three artifacts related to their family’s past. But usually the exercise doesn’t go over very well.

"I often find out they don’t know too much about their heritage," Slaby said.

This experience encouraged her to figure out a way to intrigue junior high students with stories about coal mining and immigration. These tales made the areas from Pottsville to Scranton valuable to the country’s history.

Slaby was born in Philadelphia, but grew up in Coaldale, about 30 miles south of Hazleton. She started to research her family history later in life. Her research in area historical societies culminated in 2002 when 18 family members accompanied her to Donegal, the county in Ireland where her mother’s family originally lived.

Through her genealogical research, she discovered that her mother’s grandfather, Peter Bonner, may have been involved in the controversial Irish group, the Molly Maguires.

The main character of Slaby’s novel, Kate, is based on her grandmother, Katherine, who worked as a servant for the Pardee family outside Hazleton. In the book she befriends Con, a young man, who learns of the Molly Maguires.

To this day, the Molly Maguires remains an elusive group in the area’s history, and its members have been accused of killing individuals and committing various crimes from election-rigging to rioting. No hard proof exists for these past actions, and Slaby contends that the Molly Maguires may not have actually existed as people think they did.

"I think the name was put on them, and the conspiracy grew from there," Slaby said.

The book also gives an unflinching look at the hardships of Northeastern Pennsylvania in the early industrial era. The book begins with Kate’s father receiving a paralyzing injury while working in the coal mines. Throughout the book, Slaby does her best to describe the early coal mining towns in the late 1800s. The setting almost becomes a character in the novel.

Slaby and her husband, John, have two grown children, Melissa and John, who did the illustration for the cover of his mother’s book. Slaby is on sabbatical from teaching, and it will give her some extra time to promote her new novel. Slaby also published a story in "Chicken Soup for the Soul: Teens Talk High School."

Slaby is writing two more books in the series — one about Kate’s sister Sarah and her adventures in Centralia and another about her sister Mamie. Slaby knows that her books may be a non-traditional look at history, but if teenagers read them, she hopes they’ll learn to have pride in growing up in such a fascinating historical area.

"I always find that I become more interested in something when I had a personal connection," Slaby said. "This area was the Wild West of its day."

If you go:

What: Book signing for Mary Garrity Slaby and her book, "Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires," written under the pen name Molly Roe.

Where: Wilkes/King’s Barnes & Noble book store, South Main Street, Wilkes-Barre.

When: Today from noon to 2 p.m.

Details: "Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires" is available at amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com, or through special order.

Monday, February 2, 2009

New Novel, “Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires” by Molly Roe

Blue Mountain Moments
February 2009


New Novel, “Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires” by Molly Roe

Tribute Books announces the release of Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires by Molly Roe. The novel of historical fiction is aimed at educating while entertaining a young adult audience. Roe is a contributing author to Chicken Soup for the Soul: Teens Talk High School, as well as a teacher at Lake-Lehman Junior Senior High School.

Novel Summary: Coming of age amidst the seething unrest of the Civil War era, feisty 14-year-old Katie McCafferty infiltrates the Molly Maguires, a secret Irish organization, to rescue a lifelong friend. Under the guise of a male draft resister, Katie volunteers for a dangerous mission in hopes of preventing bloodshed. Katie risks job, family, and ultimately her very life to intervene. A series of tragedies challenge Katie's strength and ingenuity, and she faces a crisis of conscience. Can she balance her sense of justice with the law? Call Me Kate is suitable for readers from eleven to adult. The story is dramatic and adventuresome, yet expressive of daily life in the patches of the hard coal region during the Civil War.

Praise for Call Me Kate: "The writing style employed in the book entertains, educates and communicates to the reader a general understanding of the hardships of life in the anthracite coal fields of northeast Pennsylvania in the nineteenth century and Irish-American history." - Bill Strassner, Museum Educator, Eckley Miners’ Village.

Author Bio: Molly Roe is the pen name of Mary Garrity Slaby, a veteran language arts & reading teacher at Lake-Lehman Junior Senior High School. Mary holds a Ph.D. in education from Temple University, and Pennsylvania teaching certification in six areas. She has pursued the hobby of genealogy for the past decade. Mary was born in Philadelphia, raised in Schuylkill County, and currently lives in Dallas, Pennsylvania with her husband, John. They are parents of two grown children, Melissa and John Garrett, cover illustrator of Call Me Kate. Digging into the past has given Mary newfound respect for her ancestors and a better understanding of history. Call Me Kate is the first in the author’s trilogy of historical novels loosely based on the lives of the strong women who preceded her.