In 1999, novelist Julia Glass made a memorable first visit to the Crescent City, attending Words and Music: A Literary Feast in New Orleans, to receive the William Faulkner Prize for best novella. She ...
The artful construction of this seductive novel and the mature, compassionate wisdom permeating it would be impressive for a seasoned writer, but it's all the more ...
“Why, thank you. I’m getting in shape to die.” Those are the first, attention- demanding words in a new novel by Julia Glass, who won the National Book Award in 2002 for “Three Junes,” which was ...
As a mystery, Julia Glass’s fifth novel, And the Dark Sacred Night, fails completely. The plot ostensibly concerns the quest of Kit Noonan—fortysomething, depressed, directionless—to learn about his ...
There might seem to be nowhere for an author to go but down after a debut novel wins the National Book Award. But Julia Glass has been defying those odds ever since her debut, "The Three Junes," ...
"I See You Everywhere," the third novel by the National Book Award-winning Julia Glass, is surprisingly hard to get into. This novel should be sheer pleasure for readers who love stories about ...
Julia Glass, who won the 2002 National Book Award for her novel "Three Junes," begins her newest novel, "And the Dark Sacred Night," in the 1960s... Oct 28, 2014 — Julia Glass, who won the 2002 ...
If you know previous works by Julia Glass, like her National Book Award-winning debut, Three Junes (2002), you’ll probably be inclined to take her fourth novel, The Widower’s Tale, as another example ...
Julia Glass needs elbow room. Her novels sprawl, in the nicest sense of that word, across generations, countries, politics. And yet her deepest fascination is the ties of kinship, surely the most ...
“V irginia Woolf was wrong,”Julia Glass says, grinning as she ushers me into her ground-floor Greenwich Village apartment. “You do not need a room of your own to write.” Glass’s cheerfully disordered ...
Without a doubt, receiving the National Book Award for your first effort is a heady and unnerving experience. But Julia Glass, who won the prestigious award for her debut novel, “Three Junes,” in 2002 ...
Julia Glass won the National Book Award in 2002 for her elegant debut novel, Three Junes, then continued the story of one character, gay bookstore owner Fenno McLeod, in 2006's The Whole World Over.
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