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Julia Glass

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julia Glass
Julia Glass at the 2010 Texas Book Festival
Julia Glass at the 2010 Texas Book Festival
Born (1956-03-23) March 23, 1956 (age 68)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
OccupationNovelist
Alma materYale University
Notable awardsWilliam Faulkner – William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition
National Book Award
PartnerDennis Cowley
Children2

Julia Glass (born March 23, 1956) is an American novelist. Her debut novel, Three Junes, won the National Book Award for Fiction in 2002.[1]

Glass followed Three Junes with a second novel, The Whole World Over, in 2006, set in the same Bank Street–Greenwich Village universe, with three interwoven stories featuring several characters from Three Junes.[2] Her third novel, I See You Everywhere, was published in 2008; her fourth, The Widower's Tale, in 2010; her fifth, And the Dark Sacred Night, in 2014; her sixth, The House Among the Trees, in 2017; her seventh, Vigil Harbor, in 2022.

Glass was born in Boston, grew up in Belmont, Massachusetts and Lincoln, Massachusetts, and attended Concord Academy. She graduated from Yale in 1978. Intending to become a painter, she moved to New York City, where she lived for many years, painting in a small studio in Brooklyn and supporting herself as a freelance editor and copy editor, including several years in the copy department of Cosmopolitan magazine. She lives in Marblehead, Massachusetts, with her partner, the photographer Dennis Cowley, and their two children, and works as a freelance journalist and editor, while teaching fiction writing at Emerson College.[3] She is a previous winner of the William Faulkner - William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition and a 2015 James Merrill House Fellow.

References

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  1. ^ "National Book Awards – 2002". National Book Foundation. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
    (With acceptance speech by Glass and essay by Judy Blundell from the Awards 60-year anniversary blog.)
  2. ^ "The Whole World Over (review)". Retrieved 2010-06-17.
  3. ^ "Julia Glass Senior Distinguished Writer-in-Residence". Emerson College. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
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