The Boston Globe, March 12th, 2003
NEW YORK - Nothing about novelist Julia Glass's personal story is typical. The Massachusetts native broke nearly every literary convention on her way to winning the 2002 National Book Award for "Three Junes," her first novel. She didn't start writing at a young age, had no novelist friends, and never took a writing course. She wrote "Three Junes" without an outline, showed her manuscript to no one until she was finished, and - perhaps most startling - bagged a major-league award on her first try. Over a recent lunch at Les Deux Gamins, a French restaurant in her West Village neighborhood, Glas...
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