The Glass Menagerie

mass market paperback, 137 pages

English language

Published Oct. 2, 1987 by New American Library.

ISBN:
978-0-451-16636-4
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OCLC Number:
16898943

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(2 reviews)

The Glass Menagerie was Tennesse Williams's first dramatic success. Though he went on to write such unforgettable plays as A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, it remains in the minds of many his most moving masterpiece, his most perfectly wrought triumph. The story of a mother, her son and daughter, and her daughter's suitor, it brings to life human beings who cling to a dream world that can so easily be shattered into jagged pieces, as illusion is destroyed by reality. (back cover)

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The Glass Menagerie is a masterful play detailing the struggles of a broken family in poverty during the 1930s. Depressingly realistic and disturbingly contemporary, I was shocked with how much character growth and storytelling could be put into such a short script.

Amanda is the mother of two children, Tom and Laura. Abandoned by her husband, she is left to keep her family afloat by selling magazine subscriptions as she cares for her disabled daughter. Tom works at a factory, but dreams of bigger things, leading to resentment towards his family since he feels as if he is trapped taking care of them. Laura, gripped with social anxiety, has not yet told her family that she's dropped out of school, making the family's financial future even more questionable. Amanda's only hope is to find Laura a proper suitor who could possibly promise to provide for her, like she herself had …

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