While many of her contemporaries are playing canasta, she’s releasing her 25th book. There’s no mystery to it, Tyler says: ...
Baltimore author Anne Tyler’s 26th novel, “Three Days in June,” is almost entirely sunny and uncharacteristically free of ...
In “Three Days in June,” Anne Tyler makes the case for forgiving people’s shortcomings and cutting each other slack.
Anne Tyler’s 25th novel, the brief “Three Days in June,” is told in first person by the acerbic Gail Baines. On the first of the three days, she loses her job at a school — she lacks ...
Anne Tyler’s new book is called “Three Days in June,” but it can happily be read during one day in February. A svelte, finely constructed novel, it’s a story of self-sufficient loneliness ...
It’s as if my subconscious had been trying to tell me something. Anne Tyler novels don’t always have stereotypical “happy” endings, but they generally do offer a sense of resolution.
by addressing the reader directly, inviting us into Gail Baines’ world (set in Baltimore, of course, Tyler’s favorite backdrop). Sixty-ish Gail is quick to clarify that she means “standard ...
A replica of the annex where Jewish schoolgirl Anne Frank and her family hid from the Nazis will open in New York next week, targeting a new generation with the lessons of the Holocaust.
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