Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
Fences
Unavailable
Fences
Unavailable
Fences
Ebook115 pages1 hour

Fences

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

From legendary playwright August Wilson comes the powerful, stunning dramatic bestseller that won him critical acclaim, including the Tony Award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize.

Troy Maxson is a strong man, a hard man. He has had to be to survive. Troy Maxson has gone through life in an America where to be proud and black is to face pressures that could crush a man, body and soul. But the 1950s are yielding to the new spirit of liberation in the 1960s, a spirit that is changing the world Troy Maxson has learned to deal with the only way he can, a spirit that is making him a stranger, angry and afraid, in a world he never knew and to a wife and son he understands less and less. This is a modern classic, a book that deals with the impossibly difficult themes of race in America, set during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 60s. 

Now an Academy Award-winning film directed by and starring Denzel Washington, along with Academy Award and Golden Globe winner Viola Davis.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPenguin Group
Release dateAug 6, 2019
ISBN9780593087589
Unavailable
Fences

Related to Fences

Related ebooks

Ethnic Studies For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Fences

Rating: 3.830935269064748 out of 5 stars
4/5

278 ratings12 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read this for a drama class last semester, and knew next to nothing about it before I picked it up and read it for myself. In contrast, I had some connection to all the other plays we read in that class—I’ve loved Shakespeare since I was a child, and so had no qualms with making the romp through A Midsummer Night’s Dream again; I consider myself somewhat of a Sondheim devotee and knew Sweeney Todd already; and though I was new to classical drama, I relished the chance to acquaint myself with Sophocles and his Theban cycle. Looking back, however, I have to say that I think Fences had the most impact on me of the plays we read.August Wilson has crafted a tremendously powerful story here. Yes, it is an “African American play,” and racism is a prominent theme, but reducing it to just that, one misses out on the universality, the sheer humanity, of the characters and situations. This is a play about social ills, about love, about death, and most of all, about family. The characters commit wildly unpredictable, morally questionable acts—I’m thinking primarily of the protagonist, Troy Maxson, who was originally played on stage by James Earl Jones and more recently by Denzel Washington—and yet you can’t take your eyes off of them. Of all the cast, my heart went out particularly to Rose. Man, what a part! And what a life.I don’t have any immediate plans to read the other plays in Wilson's century cycle, but he’s certainly on my radar now. Hopefully it won’t take another school assignment for me to seek his work out.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    1957 Pittsburgh.Troy Maxson, garbage man and former Negro leagues star, is trying to stop his son from being recruited to college to play football. Troy is jealous and angry because of the course of his life. He was kept out of the major leagues by racist policies. He only owns his home because his brother was severely injured in WW2 and his settlement enabled them to buy the house. He has worked and worked but due to his race his abilities haven't mattered. He tries to convince his son that those supposed possibilities aren't real. His wife, Rose, disagrees.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Drama that takes place in 1957 focusing on the main character, Tony, a strong hard working black man, who is drowning in anger by the racism that has kept him in his perception from meeting his dreams. Not a fast-moving play but the concepts of racism, family values and sense of survival are so strong that it is a excellent book for high school English classes.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Pulitzer prize winner for this play bout the black experience in the 1950's of an Eastern industrial city
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I will let the back cover of the copy I read briefly describe the play: Troy Maxson has gone through life in a country where to be proud and black was to face pressures that could crush a man, body and soul. But the 1950s are yielding to the new spirit of liberation in the 1960s. It's a spirit that is making him a stranger, angry and afraid, in a world he never knew and to a wife and son he understands less and less.Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1987, Wilson's dramatic work is one I would have loved to have seen when it opened at the Yale Repretory Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut on April 30, 1985 or when it opened on Broadway two years later. Why you may ask? Because the lead role of Troy Maxson was played by none other than James Earl Jones, one of my favorite actors. Troy is a family man from a hardworking past that has struggled and made decisions to make the life he has today for his wife and his family. When we meet Troy, he is a man in his 50s - a sanitation collector - with a grown son Lyon, and a younger son Cory by his wife Rose who is till in high school with the dream of sports in his future. A family man with a roving eye and unsettling memories of his sports hero past from playing baseball in the Negro League, Wilson has provided the perfectly flawed and very human character to depict the struggles of African Americans as he uses Troy as the voice to convey what was then and the values that are and should remain important in the liberating and changing times of the 50s and 60s. A well written play (with one set only!) that would be an amazing treat to see performed as I don't think reading the play really does this work true justice... it is one that needs and should be performed to fully convey the emotion and angst Wilson intends to be experienced.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    August WilsonFENCESPlume, 1986Play"Can't visit the sins of the father upon the child."A few summers back, August Wilson's play, FENCES, was performed at a local theater. I missed every performance. That was upsetting. I love seeing plays. Recently, I saw that FENCES was being made into a major motion picture with Denzel Washington. With renewed interest, I ordered the play, and read it in one sitting.FENCES is set in the 1950s. The Acts mostly take place on Fridays. Payday. On the porch of a small house, with a dirt yard, we meet Troy Maxson, his wife Rose, their son Cory, Troy's other son, Lyons, and Troy's disabled brother, Gabe, and, additionally, Bono, Troy's lifelong friend.Unfortunately, Troy is not a likeable man. Although he'd lived a hard life, his life is spent in the past. Despite having left home at fourteen, and spending fifteen years in prison for murder, he married, landed a good job as a garbage man, and started a family. His once dreamed of playing professional baseball. Too many things were stacked against him. The fact he was black became the tallest obstacle, and an impossible hurdle.Hard working, Troy has little time for his boys. Lyons is in his thirties, and doesn't work. He is a musician, and despite having no money, and begging for cash from his father, it is clear Lyons wants to, in some way, salvage his relationship with his father. His constant pleas for Troy to come down to the club where his band plays scream for attention that time, and again, Troy ignores.Rose's and Troy's son, Cory, is athletic. His football playing might land him a scholarship into college. A recruiter is anxious to discuss terms with Troy. Determined his son is living in a fantasy, Troy continually gives Cory a hard time, setting unrealistic goals with little care of the consequences.Gabe, Troy's younger brother, fought in World War II. A plate in his head has him believing he is the Arch Angel Gabriel. The government checks helped Troy make ends meet, but when Gabe moves out, hard feelings set in.Troy likes to make everyone believe he is smarter than he is. He wants people to know he is strong, and in charge. He is the King of his Castle. Ruler over Rose, and Cory, and even Lyons. What he says, goes. He is harsh, and brash, and obnoxious. Calloused, and careless.His mistakes continually pile up. He makes one bad call after another. And then, when his reality is there facing him, ready to wrestle -- he has no one to blame for the outcome, except himself."You went back on yourself Troy. You gonna have to answer for that."The thing is, I don't think Troy ever truly gets it. I don't think he ever understands that he was the problem. And that, for me, was the tragedy. That was what made this story so sad, and depressing. Troy never got it. He just never got it.FENCES is a fantastic, taut play. I am going to have to read more August Wilson. No doubt about it. The messages were there. Clear, and not so subtle, and I loved the story.Phillip TomassoAuthor of the Severed Empire Series, andThe Vaccination Trilogy
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Published in 1983, this is the sixth play of August Wilson’s “Pittsburgh Cycle,” and by far the best known, winning the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. All the plays in the cycle take up various aspects of the American-American experience during the first part of the twentieth century. “Fences,” as the namely subtly hints at, looks at the differing ways of life and cultural assumptions that Americans – black and white – of two generations as they find themselves growing further and further apart. The action revolves around Troy Maxson, the dictatorial, autocratic patriarch who rules over the play with a brooding, constant, suffocating presence. Everyone slavishly concedes to his authoritarian, overbearing personality – his wife Rose, his best friend Bono, and his two grown children, Lyons and Cory. Troy, now a garbage man, was once an aspiring baseball player when he was younger, but was unable to break into the game because of the color barrier. When his son shows similar athletic promise, he shuts down any opportunity for him to pursue it, demanding that he get a job at the local store instead. Whether it is out of spite or not is unclear, but his negation of his son’s dreams comes across as mean-spirited and petty. At another point, his son Cory asks his father “How come you ain’t never liked me?” to which Troy responds “Liked you? Who the hell said I gotta like you?”Much of the play revolves around the ways Troy exerts his power over his wife and children. His son, Lyons, occasionally asks him for money, which always makes Troy bristle with resentment and sends him into a seething tirade about how Lyons shouldn’t feel entitled and should stop coming by just to borrow money. Troy has an affair with Alberta (whom we never see) and conceives a child with her, Raynell, whom we only see in the last scene at Troy’s funeral. The title refers to the fence that Troy and his son try to build throughout the play, yet Troy always seems to be castigating him for doing something else, but it preforms other functions, too. Troy has an (extreme) aversion toward death and loss; the fence is, one supposes, there to militate against death. The fence had another, much more resonant meaning for me: it stands for the wall that separates black Americans raised in the 1930s and 1940s from their children raised in the 1960s, with all the social, cultural, and political baggage that comes along with that chasmal divide. At the end of the play, Wilson has certainly made a hell of a character out of Troy – a character who begs for the readers’ sympathy. But as great of a playwright as he is, he just couldn’t bring me there; I could never see Troy as anything other than a tyrannical despot. I felt sorry for his children, and wondered why his wife suffered his presence. I tried to find virtues in him, but the fact that he is a soi-disant hard-drinking Lothario really doesn’t help his case. I have to admit, however, that I am biased: Troy reminds me of someone in my own family whose very presence I cannot bear, yet who I grew up around, and whose philistinism I occasionally still have to bear. Much of what he said in the play, his motivations, his attitudes, are exactly like those of said relative. I know it is precisely this fearful symmetry which caused such a visceral reaction toward the play itself. As much as I disliked Troy, the play itself is superb. To capture the psychology of a man like Troy, as well as his long-suffering wife and children, takes a superb craftsman, which Wilson definitely is.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    3.5***

    Troy Maxson is a strong man. He has survived a hard childhood and time spent without direction or purpose to become a responsible family man. He went through a time in American history where being proud and black meant facing obstacles that might crush a lesser man. But in the late 1950s things are beginning to change, and Troy Maxson is unsure how to behave in a world that frightens and angers him. What he learned so well in raising himself leaves him with a rigid sense of obligation, but no flexibility to deal with a world, a family, a wife and son he no longer understands.

    Too bad my F2F book club decided to read this for discussion this month. I really dislike reading plays – reading is not the medium the playwright intended for reaching his audience. I’ve seen this play performed and it was powerful, dramatic, and thought-provoking. But reading it … I miss all the technique and skill that professional actors bring to translating Wilson’s words and directions into a visceral experience. There are some soliloquies that are exceptional – Troy reliving his boyhood and the event that caused him to leave home at age fourteen; Rose explaining her take on their marriage – but I had a hard time connecting to the characters through reading much of their dialogue on a page vs watching it unfold on the stage.

    Wilson won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for this play. If you get a chance to see a performance, don’t miss it!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A story about wanting more for others and your own self at the same time. It's about the barriers we put up in our lives. Wilson weaves words together to build these powerfully beautiful and heartbreaking monologues you really can't help getting chills when reading. Well, I couldn't at least.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A rich, tragic, restless play. An encasulation of the American Dream, as we see it for Jim Crow-era Black Americans.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read this play at the same time as Hansberry's _A Raisin in the Sun_. I will be reading this with my 11th graders in the coming weeks, and _Raisin_ with my 9th graders. It is interesting to see how these two plays depict the African-American experience in the 1950's, on the verge of the civil rights movement, in cities like Pittsburgh and Chicago. Both plays have at their center the character of a conflicted black male patriarch, whose struggle with his identity ends up destroying the dreams of their families. Troy Maxson, a former Negro league baseball player, spitefully keeps his son from pursuing a college football scholarship, passing his own frustrations down to the next generation.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoyed reading this play, though I usually do not enjoy the play format. The characters were believable, and their troubles contemporary and realistic. The family drama is interesting and is the focus of the play (with interactions between brothers, father-son, and husband-wife), but viewing these through the lens of a 1950-1960s African American family is enlightening, as the reader can see how racism and discrimination impact most aspects of the family's life.

    1 person found this helpful