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"Three Junes a Must Read"
“Julia Glass’s talent just sends chills up my spine; her novel,
“Three Junes”, is a marvel.” ---Richard Russo, author of “Empire
Falls”
That’s quite a testament to Ms. Glass’s first novel. Read what
Michael Cunningham, author of “The Hours”, has to say: “ ‘Three
Junes’ almost threatens to burst with all the life it contains.
Glass’s ability to locate the immense within the particular, and to
simultaneously illuminate and deepen the mysteries of her
characters’ lives, would be marvelous in any novelist. In a
first-time novelist, it’s extraordinary.”
The book jacket hardly does Julia Glass justice. “Julia Glass was
awarded a 2000 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in
fiction writing and has won several prizes for her short stories,
including three Nelson Algren Awards and the Tobias Wolff Award.
“Collies,” the first part of “Three Junes”, won the 1999 Pirate’s
Alley Faulkner Society Medal for Best Novella. She lives with her
family in New York City, where she works as a freelance journalist
and editor.” Scant information for those of us piqued by her
tremendous talent.
“Three Junes” is a vividly textured novel set on both sides of the
Atlantic during three fateful summers in the lives of a Scottish
family. In June of 1989, Paul McLeod, the recently widowed
patriarch, becomes infatuated with a young American artist while
traveling through Greece and is compelled to relive the secret
sorrows of his marriage. Six years later, Paul’s death reunites his
sons at Tealing, their idyllic childhood home, where Fenno, the
eldest, faces a choice that puts him at the center of his family’s
future. A lovable, slightly repressed gay man, Fenno leads the life
of an aloof expatriate in the West Village, running a shop filled
with books and bird watching gear. He believes himself safe from all
emotional entanglements----until a worldly neighbor presents him
with an extraordinary gift and a seductive photographer makes him an
unwitting subject. Each man draws Fenno into territories of the
heart he has never braved before, leading him toward an almost
unbearable loss that will reveal to him the nature of love.
Love in its limitless forms---between husband and wife, between
lovers, between people and animals, between parents and
children---is the force that moves these characters’ lives, which
collide again, in yet another June, over a Long Island dinner table.
This time it is Fenno who meets and captivates Fern, the same woman
who captivated his father in Greece ten years before. Now pregnant
with a son of her own, Fern, like Fenno and Paul before him must
make peace with her past to embrace her future. Elegantly detailed,
yet full of emotional suspense, often as comic as it is sad, “Three
Junes” is a glorious triptych about how we learn to live, and live
fully, beyond incurable grief and betrayals of the heart----how
family ties, both those we’re born into and those we make, can offer
us redemption and joy.
I think of all the “blurbs” concerning this work, I like John
Casey’s the best. As the author of “The Half-life of Happiness” I
really admire and respect his opinion. “ ‘Three Junes’ has the rich
pleasures of a nineteenth-century novel and the rush of New York
life of the last ten years. I’m amazed it’s a first novel------it is
a mature, captivating work of fiction.”
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