The Piano Teacher: A Novel
The Piano Teacher: A Novel book cover

The Piano Teacher: A Novel

Paperback – Bargain Price, November 17, 2009

Price
$14.13
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
Penguin
Publication Date
Dimensions
5.3 x 0.73 x 7.96 inches
Weight
7.2 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Former Elle editor Lee delivers a standout debut dealing with the rigors of love and survival during a time of war, and the consequences of choices made under duress. Claire Pendleton, newly married and arrived in Hong Kong in 1952, finds work giving piano lessons to the daughter of Melody and Victor Chen, a wealthy Chinese couple. While the girl is less than interested in music, the Chens' flinty British expat driver, Will Truesdale, is certainly interested in Claire, and vice versa. Their fast-blossoming affair is juxtaposed against a plot line beginning in 1941 when Will gets swept up by the beautiful and tempestuous Trudy Liang, and then follows through his life during the Japanese occupation. As Claire and Will's affair becomes common knowledge, so do the specifics of Will's murky past, Trudy's motivations and Victor's role in past events. The rippling of past actions through to the present lends the narrative layers of intrigue and more than a few unexpected twists. Lee covers a little-known time in Chinese history without melodrama, and deconstructs without judgment the choices people make in order to live one more day under torturous circumstances. (Jan.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Janice Y.K. Lee was born and raised in Hong Kong and graduated from Harvard University. A former editor at Elle magazine, she currently lives in Hong Kong with her husband and children.

Features & Highlights

  • "A rare and exquisite story...Transports you out of time, out of place, into a world you can feel on your very skin." -Elizabeth Gilbert
  • In the sweeping tradition of
  • The English Patient
  • , Janice Y.K. Lee's debut novel is a tale of love and betrayal set in war-torn Hong Kong. In 1942, Englishman Will Truesdale falls headlong into a passionate relationship with Trudy Liang, a beautiful Eurasian socialite. But their affair is soon threatened by the invasion of the Japanese as World War II overwhelms their part of the world. Ten years later, Claire Pendleton comes to Hong Kong to work as a piano teacher and also begins a fateful affair. As the threads of this spellbinding novel intertwine, impossible choices emerge-between love and safety, courage and survival, the present, and above all, the past.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(359)
★★★★
20%
(240)
★★★
15%
(180)
★★
7%
(84)
28%
(335)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

A Very Enjoyable Book !

This is a perfect book for a weekend trip, easy to read, engrossing, and full of local color and descriptions of pre war and post war Hong Kong (since I have never visited HK, I can only imagine that the description may be accurate). Regardless, it was fun to read ! The plot took very interesting turns and I found that I reached a point when I could not put the book down ! The author did a superb job of chronologically seperating the sections. The Stanley prison portion was especially interesting, and again, I believe well researched. I definitely recommend it and hope that others will get the same enjoyable and pleasure as I did reading it. Thanks for a very good story !
2 people found this helpful
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enjoy social histroy

The author of PIANO TEACHER must get the story right? All the hinted at social nuances must have some validity? Janice Lee, the author, was born and raised in Hong Kong and currently lives in Hong Kong. How authentic is that?
Lee writes about Hong Kong pre, post and during World War II. It's a girlie book, for sure, not much historical meat for a real he-man to sink his teeth into. The author writes about the minute relationships between the races and classes; capturer and captured. Back stabbing! Affairs! Greed! Survival! Confinement, All the miseries of war!!
To provide mystery, she writes two books within one. How these two story lines come together is perhaps the main mystery of the novel.
The book has a the beautiful cover photo, so one can be proud to read it front of others!! Not like other books that must be covered with a paper bag wrapper! Similar to the little twisted bag the drunk on a park bench uses drinking Night Train. But that another story!
I enjoyed the book! Not the best but not a waste of time. For first book I give it a B !!
✓ Verified Purchase

stolen goods, love and lives

I wasn't particularly impressed by the prose, which I thought ok but rather plain, but the stories and chracters of this book spoke to me emotionally, whose lives were stolen, sold, exploited, betrayed and grieved in the complex whirlpool of colonialism and the war. I thought all characters, including minor ones were intriguing, colorful and had depth, and their relationships and behaviors provided the historical atmosphere of the era and the precarious, and self contradicting nature of this famous cosmopolitan part of China. The title, though, is misleading because the piano teacher-Claire--although is a perfectly good choice through whom to unfold the past and connect with the current, is the character with the least ownership of the story, except that she probably symbolically embodies the state of the nation which inevitably needs to confront and define one's existence in a changing and foreign place, whether by exploitation, adultery, understanding, sympathies, or determination, so forth.