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Julia Glass (Writer)
[March 23, 1956 - ] |
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Profile created 2003 |
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The Whole World Over: A Novel
(2006)
From the author of the beloved novel Three
Junes comes a rich and commanding story about the accidents, both
grand and small, that determine our choices in love and marriage. Greenie
Duquette, openhearted yet stubborn, devotes most of her passionate
attention to her Greenwich Village bakery and her four–year–old son,
George. Her husband, Alan, seems to have fallen into a midlife depression,
while Walter, a traditional gay man who has become her closest
professional ally, is nursing a broken heart.
It is at Walter’s restaurant that the visiting governor of New Mexico
tastes Greenie’s coconut cake and decides to woo her away from the city to
be his chef. For reasons both ambitious and desperate, she accepts—and
finds herself heading west without her husband. This impulsive decision
will change the course of several lives within and beyond Greenie’s orbit.
Alan, alone in New York, must face down his demons; Walter, eager for
platonic distraction, takes in his teenage nephew. Yet Walter cannot steer
clear of love trouble, and despite his enforced solitude, Alan is still
surrounded by women: his powerful sister, an old flame, and an animal
lover named Saga, who grapples with demons all her own. As for Greenie,
living in the shadow of a charismatic politician leads to a series of
unforeseen consequences that separate her from her only child. We watch as
folly, chance, and determination pull all these lives together and apart
over a year that culminates in the fall of the twin towers at the World
Trade Center, an event that will affirm or confound the choices each
character has made—or has refused to face.
Julia Glass is at her best here, weaving a glorious tapestry of lives and
lifetimes, of places and people, revealing the subtle mechanisms behind
our most important, and often most fragile, connections to others. In
The Whole World Over she has given us another tale that pays tribute
to the extraordinary complexities of love.
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Three Junes (2002) --
Winner 2002 National Book Award for Fiction
Three Junes is a vividly textured symphonic 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 birdwatching 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.
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Julia Glass Is Listed As A Favorite Of (Alphabetical Order By First Name)
Robin Reardon
Julia's Favorite Authors/Books (Alphabetical Order By First Name)
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