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Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and winner of the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, this modern American classic is about family, and the legacy of slavery in America.
August Wilson has already given the American theater such spell-binding plays about the black experience in 20th-century America as Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, Joe Turner's Come and Gone, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Fences. In his second Pulitzer Prize-winner, The Piano Lesson, Wilson has fashioned perhaps his most haunting and dramatic work.At the heart of the play stands the ornately carved upright piano which, as the Charles family's prized, hard-won possession, has been gathering dust in the parlor of Berniece Charles's Pittsburgh home. When Boy Willie, Berniece's exuberant brother, bursts into her life with his dream of buying the same Mississippi land that his family had worked as slaves, he plans to sell their antique piano for the hard cash he needs to stake his future. But Berniece refuses to sell, clinging to the piano as a reminder of the history that is their family legacy. This dilemma is the real piano lesson, reminding us that blacks are often deprived both of the symbols of their past and of opportunity in the present.
It takes about 5 Hours and 17 minutes on average for a reader to read The Piano Lesson. This is based on the average reading speed of 250 Words per minute.
The recommended reading level for The Piano Lesson is College Freshman and Up .
The Piano Lesson is 144 pages long.
The Piano Lesson is book #4 in the The Century Cycle Book Series and comes after Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and comes before Seven Guitars
in 1990 The Piano Lesson won the Pulitzer Prize in category .
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