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Three Junes » (Unabridged, 12 CDs, 14 hours)

Book cover image of Three Junes by Julia Glass

Authors: Julia Glass, John Keating
ISBN-13: 9780739333761, ISBN-10: 0739333763
Format: Compact Disc
Publisher: Random House Audio Publishing Group
Date Published: May 2006
Edition: Unabridged, 12 CDs, 14 hours

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Author Biography: Julia Glass

Among the many honors bestowed on artist-turned-writer Julia Glass are the Nelson Algren Fiction Award, the Tobias Wolff Award, the Pirate's Alley Faulkner Society Medal for Best Novella, and the 2002 National Book Award for her debut novel Three Junes. While Glass still works as a freelance journalist and editor, clearly she's come into an esteemed literary league!

Book Synopsis

National Book Award Winner

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,...

The New Yorker

This enormously accomplished début novel is a triptych that spans three summers, across a decade, in the disparate lives of the McLeod family. The widowed father, a newspaper publisher who maintains the family manse in Scotland, is chary, dogged, and deceptively mild. Fenno, the eldest son, runs an upscale bookshop in the West Village, and his most intimate relationship -- aside from almost anonymous grapplings with a career house-sitter named Tony -- is with a parrot called Felicity. One of Fenno's younger brothers is a Paris chef whose wife turns out pretty daughters like so many brioches; the other is a veterinarian whose wife wants Fenno to help them have a baby. Glass is interested in how risky love is for some people, and she writes so well that what might seem like farce is rich, absorbing, and full of life.

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