Three Junes

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Julia Glass: Three Junes (EBook, 2008, Random House Publishing Group)

eBook

English language

Published Nov. 13, 2008 by Random House Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-1-4090-3678-4
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'Threatens to burst with all the life it contains.' Michael Cunningham, author of The HoursIn this captivating debut novel, Julia Glass depicts the life and loves of the McLeod family during three crucial summers spanning a decade. Paul McLeod, patriarch of a Scottish family and a retired newspaper editor and proprietor, is on a package tour of Greece after the death of his wife. The story of his departure from the family home in Scotland and late gesture towards some sort of freedom gives way to his eldest son's life (Fenno). Fenno protects his heart by putting himself under emotional quarantine throughout his life as a young gay man in Manhattan. When he returns home for his father's funeral, this emotional isolation cannot be sustained when he is confronted by a choice that puts him at the centre of his family and its future. Three Junes is a novel about …

6 editions

Review of 'Three Junes' on 'Goodreads'

Three Junes, by Julia Glass, has been hanging around on my bookshelves for quite some time. Yes, that's shelves, plural, since it's been around for at least two rearrangements. Glass won the 2002 National Book Award for this novel, and surprise-surprise, I loved it. The Junes in the title refer to three different months, different times in the life of the McCleod family, but it's not exactly chronological--there are many flashbacks woven throughout the book, which is perfectly paced. The father is Paul McCleod, who hails from a well-heeled Scottish family, and he runs the newspaper his father founded. His wife, Maureen, breeds and trains collies, and together, they have three sons: Fenno, followed by the twins Dennis and David.

The book opens as Paul is taking a guided tour of the Greek Islands after he has been widowed, which gives him ample time to reflect on his past life …

Review of 'Three Junes' on 'LibraryThing'

A fascinating set of three somewhat interlocked stories (the third interlocks less, and is the least interesting of the three), spanning two generations of a Scottish family. The people really engaged me a way that novels where not a whole lot happens usually do not engage me. The story of Fenno, the gay Scottish son who tries to find himself was the most interesting.