Fence: Striking Distance
by Sarah Rees Brennan · Fence (prose novels) #1
Four voices, one team, and a quiet masterclass in writing teenage interiority.
The story
At Kings Row, an elite fencing prep school, a new coach decides the team's problem isn't technique — it's that these five talented boys don't actually know each other. Through enforced bonding exercises, personal essays, and the ordinary chaos of boarding-school life, four alternating narrators (a charming performer hiding old wounds, a conscientious captain finally asking what he wants, a socially-literal prodigy learning what friendship costs, and a scholarship kid discovering what belonging feels like) start telling each other the truth. The fencing is almost incidental; the real sport is emotional honesty.
Age verdict
Best fit ages 14-17. The emotional sophistication and romantic subtext land most honestly with mid-to-older teens.
Our take
literary-emotional
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Character voice Exceptional
Four distinct narrators pass the Swap Test masterfully: Aiden's theatrical 'I was born gorgeous' (Ch4), Nicholas's rough direct observations (Ch5), Seiji's precise literalism (Ch7), Harvard's earnest reflection (Ch6). Voice differentiation rivals the best of the YA benchmark — peer to A Deadly Education (10, voice-drenched) and exceeds Catherine, Called Birdy (9).
- Middle momentum Strong
Seventy-one micro-chapters with alternating POVs create rapid-fire emotional escalation through Ch4-12 — readers can't find a stopping point between the essay reveals, the prank cascade, and Rosina chase. Stronger than Abel's Island (7, steady) but below the propulsive middle of The Maze Runner (9).
Parents love
- Writing quality Exceptional
Four calibrated narrative voices, controlled musicality that accelerates in combat and slows in reflection, restraint in vulnerability ('He found himself chewing on a fingernail, stopped, and scowled at himself') — this is literary YA craft. Comparable to A Deadly Education (9, voice-first literary prose); below the poetic craft of A Snicker of Magic (10).
- Stereotype-breaker Strong
Complex teenage boys who are publicly composed and privately shattered; fencing subverts jock stereotype; LGBTQ+ romantic threads presented as ordinary rather than issue-of-the-week; scholarship student's shame rendered without pity. Comparable to Ash (8, quiet stereotype-subversion); peer work in the YA benchmark.
Teachers love
- Mentor text quality Exceptional
Chapter 4's Aiden-essay-inside-a-chapter is textbook-grade mentor text for teaching first-person voice, unreliable narration, and character-through-subtext; Chapter 11's emotional restraint demonstrates 'show don't tell' with physical action carrying feeling. Comparable to A Deadly Education (9, voice-craft mentor text).
- Empathy & self-awareness Strong
Multi-POV architecture forces readers to hold contradictory emotional truths simultaneously — Aiden despairing while Harvard hopes — producing exactly the kind of perspective-taking that builds empathy. Comparable to All the Broken Pieces (8, perspective-building at scale).
✓ Perfect for
- • teens who loved Heartstopper-style character-first queer YA
- • readers who prefer interior-emotional stakes over plot fireworks
- • fans of the Fence graphic novels wanting deeper character interiority
- • readers drawn to ensemble boarding-school stories
Not ideal for
Readers wanting fencing-tournament action or plot-driven sports drama — the match scenes are brief and the tension is almost entirely relational.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 288
- Chapters
- 71
- Words
- 80k
- Difficulty
- Moderate
- POV
- Alternating
- Illustration
- None
- Published
- 2020
- Publisher
- Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Readers who finish are the ones who lean into character interiority and don't mind a decision-moment ending over a tidy payoff.
If your kid loved "Fence: Striking Distance"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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by Miranda Kenneally
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (steady clip)
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by Shannon Hale
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both bittersweet in tone
The Truth About Stacey
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Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (steady clip)
The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl
by Stacy McAnulty
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same emotional weight (moderate)
An Abundance of Katherines
by John Green
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both bittersweet in tone
Every Soul a Star
by Wendy Mass
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both bittersweet in tone
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