Author:Julia Glass

In 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 how we live and how family ties (those that we make as well as those that we are born into) can offer redemption and joy.
Like Michael Cunningham's The Hours, which won the Pulitzer, Three Junes won its own prize (National Book Award) and deserves it-a highly accomplished and sensitive novel, all the more remarkable for being Julia Glass's first.
—— The Sunday TelegraphFree of gimmickry, Three Junes brilliantly rescues, then refurbishes, the traditional plot-driven novel.
—— The New York TimesThree Junes almost threatens to burst with all the life it contains. Glass's ability-would be marvellous in any novelist. In a first-time novelist, it's extraordinary.
—— Michael Cunningham, author of The Hours.Full of incident, mad, crackling dialogue, attractively appalling characters and some of the funniest and rudest sex scenes I have read since Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint
—— Sunday TimesWith razor-sharp dialogue, a powerful odour of ordinary desperation and an incisive understanding of what makes these men's friendship tick, Welsh is at the top of his game
—— The FaceWelsh slams back into form with his sixth book - all brutal sentimentality and bleak, edgy humour... You have a coming-of-age story carved out with a broken bottle
—— ElleEasily his best book since the one that made his name
—— Independent on SundayI've never felt so attached to characters as I did in that book and have definitely never stayed awake all night sobbing after reading a book, but I did when I read that
—— Hollie McNish , Good HousekeepingThe Sea, The Sea is both a novel entirely about the era in which it was written and one that reflects – at an angle – the place and time we are living in… it is a joy to read: a rollicking story that seems endlessly to be building towards some awful, hilarious, frightening conclusion
—— Daisy Johnson , Harper's BazaarBy the end I was impressed, moved and touched
—— SpectatorA bittersweet love story
—— TatlerYou'll soon be as captivated by Roza's colourful tale as Chris is
—— SHEA bitter-sweet story of missed opportunities
—— Good Book GuideKeen-eyed and funny
—— Victoria Lane , Daily TelegraphThere is so much truth here, as Tyler strips away the issue of ethnic difference to reach the heart of her complex and compelling matter
—— Julie Wheelwright , IndenpdentWarm and optimistic, this story about adoption raises issues of belonging and identity
—— Bel Mooney , The TimesTyler possesses a remarkable ability to render the ordinary extraordinary, which makes reading her work like tucking into tea and cake on a cosy Sunday afternoon
—— Kathryn Mille , Time OutFull of excruciatingly comic set-pieces, this is an immensely satisfying, yet subtle, read
—— Simon Humphreys , Mail on SundayTenderly observed and lifted by humour, Digging to America is a complex novel that asks if anyone can ever truly fit in. In answering that question Ms Tyler has woven her magic once again
—— EconomistAs in her previous books, the writing here makes for wholesome, comforting fare, spiced as always with urbane wit and a knack for nailing the small truths behind fine details
—— Globe and MailIn Digging to America, Tyler exhibits her knack for softening the sharp edges of human contact, showing people with smudges of vulnerability on their faces as they dig toward each other
—— Toronto StarHer prose is at once unpretentious and elegiac, like a photograph by Dorothea Lange, and her imagery has staying power
—— New York TimesDeft and wise prose... [Tyler's] skill at turning everyday occurrences into amazing storytelling gets better and better
—— Sunday ExpressRedemptive
—— Daily Telegraph






