The Piano Tuner
The Piano Tuner book cover

The Piano Tuner

Paperback – August 19, 2003

Price
$6.69
Format
Paperback
Pages
336
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1400030385
Dimensions
5.15 x 0.71 x 7.98 inches
Weight
8.8 ounces

Description

From The New Yorker Forty-one-year-old Edgar Drake seems an unlikely protagonist for a bildungsroman. Happy with his wife of eighteen years and his reputation as one of the finest piano tuners in late-nineteenth-century London, he is "a man whose life is defined by creating order so that others may make beauty." Transformation comes in the form of a summons to a remote outpost in Burma: a maverick British officer there has imported a vintage Erard grand into the jungle, where the humidity has caused it to lose its temperament. Drake's journey to the Far East is a kind of anti-"Heart of Darkness," as he opens himself up to the uncertainty and wonder of human experience. In this début novel, Mason proves himself equally adept at scenes of wry humor and moments of rapture; most remarkable, he has written a profound adventure story with an unexpected climax, as the mild piano tuner finally becomes the hero of his own life. Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker “A gripping and resonant novel. . . . It immerses the reader in a distant world with startling immediacy and ardor. . . . Riveting.” —Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times “An ambitious, adventuresome, highly unusual first novel that offers pleasures too rarely encountered in contemporary American literary fiction. . . . [Mason is] a gifted, original and courageous writer.” — The Washington Post Book World “Luminous. . . . Mason’s writing achieves that kind of reverie in which every vision, tone, flavor and sensation is magnified.” — Los Angeles Times “Intoxicating, full of sights to see, histories to learn, stories to entertain.” — USA Today “Remarkable. . . . A profound adventure story.” – The New Yorker “Inspired. . . . The Piano Tuner is a brilliant debut.” – Miami Herald “Reminded me of books I read by flashlight, under the covers, when I was young.”xa0– USA Today “Mason’s writing achieves that kind of reverie in which every vision, tone, flavor and sensation is magnified.” – LA Times “Excellent. . . . [Mason’s] powerful prose style and his ability to embrace history, politics, nature and medicine . . . [is] astonishing.” – The New York Times Book Review “ The Piano Tuner is a haunting, passionate story of empire and individualism. . . . [Mason is] a gifted writer.” – San Francisco Chronicle “This wondrous work of fiction . . . artfully weaves psychology, politics, medicine and music theory into a polyphonic composition. . . . A virtuoso performance.” – Newsday “[A] very fine first novel. . . . Its author is rich in talent and promise.” – Philadelphia Inquirer “Daniel Mason’s ambitious, lyrical The Piano Tuner . . . [possesses] genuine moments of ominous beauty. . . . Readers . . . should be intrigued by the mix of historical detail, lush settings, and equally lush language.” – San Jose Mercury News “A smart, entertaining adventure.” – Christian Science Monitor “An intense, shimmering dream of a story.” – Grand Rapids Press “Mason has improvised a virtuoso tale . . . a complex and subtly imagined adventure.” – Guardian Unlimited From the Inside Flap In 1886 a shy, middle-aged piano tuner named Edgar Drake receives an unusual commission from the British War Office: to travel to the remote jungles of northeast Burma and there repair a rare piano belonging to an eccentric army surgeon who has proven mysteriously indispensable to the imperial design. From this irresistible beginning, The Piano Tuner launches its protagonist into a world of seductive loveliness and nightmarish intrigue. And as he follows Drake's journey, Mason dazzles readers with his erudition, moves them with his vibrantly rendered characters, and enmeshes them in the unbreakable spell of his storytelling. In 1886 a shy, middle-aged piano tuner named Edgar Drake receives an unusual commission from the British War Office: to travel to the remote jungles of northeast Burma and there repair a rare piano belonging to an eccentric army surgeon who has proven mysteriously indispensable to the imperial design. From this irresistible beginning, The Piano Tuner" launches its protagonist into a world of seductive loveliness and nightmarish intrigue. And as he follows Drake's journey, Mason dazzles readers with his erudition, moves them with his vibrantly rendered characters, and enmeshes them in the unbreakable spell of his storytelling. Daniel Mason was born and raised in Northern California. He studied biology at Harvard, and medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. His first novel, The Piano Tuner , published in 2002, was a national bestseller and has since been published in 27 countries. His other works include A Far Country , The Winter Soldier , and A Registry of My Passage Upon Earth , andxa0his writing hasxa0appearedxa0in Harper's Magazine and Lapham's Quarterly .xa0He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1It was afternoon in the office of Colonel Killian, Director of Operations for the Burma Division of the British army. Edgar Drake sat by a pair of dark, rattling heating pipes and stared out the window, watching the sweep of rain. Across the room sat the Colonel, a broad, sunburnt man with a shock of red hair and a thick mustache that fanned out in combed symmetry, underlining a fierce pair of green eyes. Behind his desk hung a long Bantu lance and a painted shield that still bore the scars of battle. He wore a scarlet uniform, edged with braids of black mohair. Edgar would remember this, for the braids reminded him of a tiger's stripes, and the scarlet made the green eyes greener.Several minutes had passed since the Colonel had entered the room, drawn up a chair behind a deeply polished mahogany desk, and begun to thumb through a stack of papers. At last he looked up. From behind the mustache came a stentorian baritone. "Thank you for waiting, Mr. Drake. I had a matter of urgency to attend to."The piano tuner turned from the window. "Of course, Colonel." He fingered his hat in his lap."If you don't mind, then we will begin at once with the matter at hand." The Colonel leaned forward. "Again, welcome to the War Office. I imagine this is your first visit here." He did not leave time for the piano tuner to respond. "On behalf of my staff and superiors, I appreciate your attention to what we consider a most serious matter. We have prepared a briefing regarding the background of this affair. If you agree, I think it would be most expedient if I summarize it for you first. We can discuss any questions you may have when you know more details." He rested his hand on a stack of papers."Thank you, Colonel," replied the tuner quietly. "I must admit that I was intrigued by your request. It is most unusual."Across the table the mustache wavered. "Most unusual indeed, Mr. Drake. We do have much to discuss of this matter. If you haven't recognized by now, this commission is as much about a man as it is about a piano. So I will begin with Surgeon-Major Carroll himself."The piano tuner nodded.The mustache wavered again. "Mr. Drake, I will not bother you with the details of Carroll's youth. Actually, his background is somewhat mysterious, and we know little. He was born in 1833, of Irish stock, the son of Mr. Thomas Carroll, a teacher of Greek poetry and prose at a boarding school in Oxfordshire. Although his family was never wealthy, his father's interest in education must have been passed along to his son, who excelled at school, and left home to pursue medicine at University College Hospital in London. Upon graduation, rather than open a private surgery as most were inclined to do, he applied for a position at a provincial hospital for the poor. As earlier, we have few records of Carroll during this time, we only know that he remained in the provinces for five years. During this time he married a local girl. The marriage was short-lived. His wife died in childbirth, along with their child, and Carroll never remarried."The Colonel cleared his throat, picked up another document, and continued. "Following his wife's death, Carroll returned to London, where he applied for a position as a physician at the Asylum for the Ragged Poor in the East End during the cholera outbreaks. He held this post for only two years. In 1863 he secured a commission as a surgeon on the Army Medical Staff."It is here, Mr. Drake, that our history becomes more complete. Carroll was appointed as a doctor to the 28th Foot in Bristol, but applied for a transfer to serve in the colonies only four months after his enlistment. The application was accepted immediately, and he was appointed deputy director of the military hospital in Saharanpur, in India. There he gained an early reputation not only as a fine physician but also as somewhat of an adventurer. He frequently accompanied expeditions into the Punjab and Kashmir, missions that put him in danger from local tribes as well as Russian agents, a problem that persists as the Tsar tries to match our territorial gains. There he also earned a reputation as a man of letters, although nothing that would suggest the, well, let us say fervor which led him to request a piano. Several superiors reported him shirking rounds and observed him reading poetry in the hospital gardens. This practice was tolerated, albeit grudgingly, after Carroll apparently recited a poem by Shelley-'Ozymandias,' I believe-to a local chieftain who was being treated at the hospital. The man, who had already signed a treaty of cooperation but had refused to commit any troops, returned to the hospital a week after his convalescence and asked to see Carroll, not the military officer. He brought with him a force of three hundred, 'to serve the "poet-soldier"-his words, not ours, Mr. Drake."The Colonel looked up. He thought he saw a slight smile on the piano tuner's face. "Remarkable story, I know.""It is a powerful poem.""It is, although I admit the episode was perhaps somewhat unfortunate.""Unfortunate?""We are getting ahead of ourselves, Mr. Drake, but I am of the mind that this matter with the Erard has something to do with the 'soldier' attempting to become somewhat more of a 'poet.' The piano-and, granted, this is just my opinion-represents a-how best to put this?-an illogical extension of such a strategy. If Doctor Carroll truly believes that bringing music to such a place will hasten peace, I only hope he brings enough riflemen to defend it." The piano tuner said nothing, and the Colonel shifted slightly in his seat. "You would agree, Mr. Drake, that to impress a local noble with recitation and rhyme is one thing. To request a grand piano to be sent to the most remote of our forts is quite another.""I know little of military matters," said Edgar Drake.The Colonel looked at him briefly before returning to the papers. This was not the kind of person ready for the climate and challenges of Burma, he thought. A tall, thin man with thick graying hair that hung loosely above a pair of wire-rim glasses, the tuner looked more like a schoolteacher than someone capable of bearing any military responsibility. He seemed old for his forty-one years; his eyebrows were dark, his cheeks lined with soft whiskers. His light-colored eyes wrinkled at their corners, although not, the Colonel noted, in the manner of someone who had spent a lifetime smiling. He was wearing a corduroy jacket, a bow tie, and worn wool trousers. It all would have conveyed a feeling of sadness, he thought, were it not for his lips, unusually full for an Englishman, which rested in a position between bemusement and faint surprise and lent him a softness which unnerved the Colonel. He also noticed the piano tuner's hands, which he massaged incessantly, their wrists lost in the cavities of his sleeves. They were not the type of hands he was accustomed to, too delicate for a man's, yet when they had greeted each other, the Colonel had felt a roughness and strength, as if they were moved by wires beneath the calloused skin.He looked back to the papers and continued. "So Carroll remained in Saharanpur for five years. During this time he served on no fewer than seventeen missions, passing more time in the field than at his post." He began to thumb through the reports on the missions the Doctor had accompanied, reading out their names. September 1866-Survey for a Rail Route Along the Upper Sutlej River. December-Mapping Expedition of the Corps of Water Engineers in the Punjab. February 1867-Report on Childbirth and Obstetric Diseases in Eastern Afghanistan. May-Veterinary Infections of Herd Animals in the Mountains of Kashmir and Their Risk to Humans. September-the Royal Society's Highland Survey of Flora in Sikkim. He seemed compelled to name them all, and did so without taking a breath, so that the veins on his neck swelled to resemble the very mountains of Kashmir-at least thought Edgar Drake, who had never been there, or studied its geography, but who, by this point, was growing impatient with the notable absence of any piano from the story."In late 1868," continued the Colonel, "the deputy director of our military hospital in Rangoon, then the only major hospital in Burma, died suddenly of dysentery. To replace him, the medical director in Calcutta recommended Carroll, who arrived in Rangoon in February 1869. He served there for three years, and since his work was mainly medical, we have few reports on his activities. All evidence suggests he was occupied with his responsibilities at the hospital."The Colonel slid a folder forward on the desk. "This is a photograph of Carroll, in Bengal." Edgar waited briefly, and then, realizing he should rise to accept it, leaned forward, dropping his hat on the floor in the process. "Sorry," he muttered, grabbing the hat, then the folder, and returning to his chair. He opened the folder in his lap. Inside was a photo, upside down. He rotated it gingerly. It showed a tall, confident man with a dark mustache and finely combed hair, dressed in khaki, standing over the bed of a patient, a darker man, perhaps an Indian. In the background there were other beds, other patients. A hospital, thought the tuner, and returned his eyes to the face of the Doctor. He could read little from the man's expression. His face was blurred, although strangely all the patients were in focus, as if the Doctor was in a state of constant animation. He stared, trying to match the man to the story he was hearing, but the photo revealed little. He rose and returned it to the Colonel's desk."In 1871 Carroll requested to be moved to a more remote station in central Burma. The request was approved, as this was a period of intensifying Burmese activity in the Irrawaddy River valley south of Mandalay. At his new post, as in India, Carroll busied himself with frequent surveying expeditions, often into the southern Shan Hills. Although it is not known exactly how-given his many responsibilities-Carroll apparently found the time to acquire near fluency in the Shan language. Some have suggested that he studied with a local monk, others that he learned from a mistress."Monks or mistresses, in 1873 we received the disastrous news that the Burmese, after decades of flirtation, had signed a commercial treaty with France. You may know this history; it was covered quite extensively in the newspapers. Although French troops were still in Indo-China and had not advanced past the Mekong, this was obviously an extremely dangerous precedent for further Franco-Burmese cooperation and an open threat to India. We immediately began rapid preparations to occupy the states of Upper Burma. Many of the Shan princes had shown long-standing antagonism to the Burmese throne, and . . ." The Colonel trailed off, out of breath from the soliloquy, and saw the piano tuner staring out the window. "Mr. Drake, are you listening?"Edgar turned back, embarrassed. "Yes . . . yes, of course.""Well then, I will continue." The Colonel looked back at his papers.Across the desk, the tuner spoke tentatively. "Actually, with due respect, Colonel, it is a most complex and interesting story, but I must admit that I don't understand why you need my expertise . . . I understand that you are accustomed to give briefings in this manner, but may I trouble you with a question?""Yes, Mr. Drake?""Well . . . to be honest, I am waiting to hear what is wrong with the piano.""I'm sorry?""The piano. I was contacted because I am being hired to tune a piano. This meeting is most comprehensive with regard to the man, but I don't believe he is my commission."The Colonel's face grew red. "As I stated at the beginning, Mr. Drake, I do believe that this background is important.""I agree, sir, but I don't know what is wrong with the piano, even whether or not I can mend it. I hope you understand.""Yes, yes. Of course I understand." The muscles in his jaw tensed. He was ready to talk about the withdrawal of the Resident from Mandalay in 1879, and the Battle of Myingyan, and the siege of the Maymyo garrison, one of his favorite stories. He waited.Edgar stared down at his hands. "I apologize, please, please, do continue," he said. "It is only that I must leave soon, as it is quite a walk to my home, and I really am most interested in the Erard grand." Despite feeling intimidated, he secretly savored this brief interruption. He had always disliked military men, and had begun to like this Carroll character more and more. In truth, he did want to hear the details of the story, but it was dark, and the Colonel showed no sign of stopping.The Colonel turned back to the papers, "Very well, Mr. Drake, I will make this brief. By 1874, we had begun to establish a handful of secret outposts in the Shan territories, one near Hsipaw, another near Taunggyi, and another-this the most remote-in a small village called Mae Lwin, on the bank of the Salween River. You won't find Mae Lwin on any maps, and until you accept the commission, I cannot tell you where it is. There we sent Carroll."The room was getting dark, and the Colonel lit a small lamp on the desk. The light flickered, casting the shadow of his mustache creeping across his cheekbones. He studied the piano tuner again. He looks impatient, he thought, and took a deep breath. "Mr. Drake, so as not to detain you much further, I will spare you the details of Carroll's twelve years in Mae Lwin. Should you accept the commission, we can talk further, and I can provide you with military reports. Unless, of course, you would like to hear them now.""I would like to hear about the piano if you don't mind.""Yes, yes of course, the piano." He sighed. "What would you like to know? I believe you have been informed of most of the details of this matter in the letter from Colonel Fitzgerald.""Yes, Carroll requested a piano. The army purchased an 1840 Erard grand and shipped it to him. Would you mind telling me more of that story?""I can't really. Other than hoping to repeat the success he found in reciting Shelley, we can't understand why he would want a piano.""Why?" The piano tuner laughed, a deep sound that came unexpectedly from the thin frame. "How many times I have asked myself the same question about my other clients. Why would a society matron who doesn't know Handel from Haydn purchase an 1820 Broadwood and request that it be tuned weekly even though it has never been played? Or how to explain the County Justice who has his instruments revoiced once every two months-which, I might add, although entirely unnecessary, is wonderful for my affairs-yet this same man refuses an entertainment license for the annual public piano competition? You will excuse me, but Doctor Carroll doesn't seem so bizarre. Have you ever heard, sir, Bach's Inventions ?" Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • New York Times
  • Notable Book
  • A
  • San Francisco Chronicle
  • ,
  • San Jose Mercury News
  • , and
  • Los Angeles Times
  • Best Book of the Year
  • “A gripping and resonant novel. . . . It immerses the reader in a distant world with startling immediacy and ardor. . . . Riveting.” —Michiko Kakutani,
  • The New York Times
  • In 1886 a shy, middle-aged piano tuner named Edgar Drake receives an unusual commission from the British War Office: to travel to the remote jungles of northeast Burma and there repair a rare piano belonging to an eccentric army surgeon who has proven mysteriously indispensable to the imperial design. From this irresistible beginning,
  • The Piano Tuner
  • launches readers into a world of seductive, vibrantly rendered characters, and enmeshes them in an unbreakable spell of storytelling.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(375)
★★★★
25%
(313)
★★★
15%
(188)
★★
7%
(88)
23%
(287)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Tale of a faraway land and time

Author Daniel Mason's debut novel tells the tale of Edgar Drake, an English piano tuner who specializes in working with Érards, upscale French instruments. One day out of the blue Drake receives a mysterious summons to tune an Érard belonging to Anthony Carroll, a British Army surgeon stationed in an unstable region of colonial Burma, and off he goes.

Mason has done his research--the descriptions of a lost, exotic land and its people are poetically evocative and cry out for visual realization (David Lean, where are you when we need you?). He also demonstrates a considerable knowledge of the workings of the British Army, colonial Burmese history and culture, and piano technology. All of this background, as fascinating as it is, frankly overwhelms the slow-paced, slender plot, which takes more than one hundred pages to bring Drake and the mysterious Dr. Carroll together. Along the way the hero meets the obligatory exotic heroine, in this case a beautiful and educated servant of Carroll's named Khin Myo, but the affair remains tastefully chaste. If one hangs with "The Piano Tuner" there is a surprise twist and an unexpected, tragic denouement that grip the reader at the eleventh hour; but the time and number of words it takes to get there suggests Mason, as beautiful and atmospheric as his writing can be, needs to work more on his sense of pacing and proportion.
40 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A memorable tale of one man�s journey to self-discovery

In October 1886, about a year after the British invaded and took over the lower region of Burma, a shy and modest piano tuner Edgar Drake received a strange request from the British War Office. The Crown had requested of his immediate service in repairing an Erard grand piano thousands of miles away, its soundboard swollen and miserably out of tune. He was to leave his wife and his quiet life in London to travel to the jungles of Burma; settled deep in a country that was almost too dangerous for a civilian deprived of any military training. The piano belonged to one Surgeon-Major Anthony Carroll who had requested the piano 30 some years earlier and threatened to resign from service had the acquisition not granted by the Crown. The irreplaceable doctor, whose eccentric peace-making strategies comprised of poetry, medicine and music, despite much disapproval and jeering from contemporaries, had mitigated tension in Burma and brought a tentative quiet to the south Shan states.
Though the request for piano repair in war states was strange and incredulous, the premise of the debut novel is tantalizing enough to elicit interest to move on as Edgar Drake embarked on his journey to the Far East. The first part of the novel detailed his journey through Europe, the Suez Canal, the Red Sea, India, then into Burma - but still that was not it as Drake had to venture into the jungle, almost in dugout, from Rangoon to the distant fort of Mae Lwin. The encounter with officers whom he had always mistrusted, Burmese, bandits, and soothsayers further intensify the suspense of what Drake might expect at his destination, and accentuate his thirst for the damaged piano.
Author Daniel Mason, who had spent a year studying malaria on the Thai-Myanmar border, where much was the book was written, delivers an absorbing story of a world in transition, through vicissitude, enlivened through characters who loved music and peace and suffer from warfare with equal intensity. The book delineates the complicated cross-currents of emerging espionage, the British contention with the Limbin Confederacy, the consolidation forces of French forces in Indo-China, and local insurgence that threatened British hold of remote regions.
Though not as rich and layered an epic as The Glass Palace, The Piano Tuner subtlety probes the meaning of identity of homeland. To Edgar Drake, it was his duty to the piano and not the Crown and he what mattered the most was that he could help in the cause of music. While at one point he felt disconcerted at the delay of repair and his hope began to vanished, he also felt like Odysseus who could no longer return home after witnessing all the wonders of a country which he struggled to eke out an inkling of understanding. The Piano Tuner is a memorable tale of one man's journey to self-discovery and passion.
2004 (16) © MY
26 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Some good writing, but thin

There is some gorgeous writing in this book, but that's about the only good thing I can say about it. The plot was thin, the characters cardboard (eccentric military man, inscrutable but beautiful Asian woman, European overwhelmed by the exotic East), and there was an overall lack of passion that's curious in a book that's supposedly at least partly about the changes in a man's character as he opens himself up to a wider world. In fact, the word that comes to mind is "bloodless." If he's so seduced by Burma that he considers not going back to England, we need a bit more emotion in his response to the place.

I've been to Burma, and so in that sense it was fun to read about food I've eaten and places I've been (though I do sort of wonder at Mason's description of Shwedagon Pagoda -- were there really souvenir/postcard sellers there in 1886? seemed like some very modern touches.) The landscape descriptions were among the best parts of the book, and it was fun to think reminiscently about the tropical landscapes.

I think my biggest quibble is just that a lot seemed unbelievable. Would the locals have truly been so cultured and so well able to speak English? Would a senior British military man really have been so thoroughly into Burmese theatre and drama? And the presence of the obligatory Asian beauty really irritated me. She seemed perfunctory, in fact, as if somebody had said to the author that he had to have a love interest in there, so he put her in. Edgar's "passion" for her was so low-key that I didn't believe he had been seduced by her presence into not ever wanting to leave. Seduced by Burma I could believe, not this.
18 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Pain and suffering

Pain and suffering are not the themes of the book. They are my experience in reading it. I had to read it for my book discussion group, wanted to discard it by page 50, but was urged to give it a chance and told that the ending was stunning. The ending was limp. I thought the language was overblown. "I cannot" instead of "I can't," and addressing your wife as "Beloved" strike me as pompous and ridiculous.

The author created an atmosphere of mystery, but never came through. His Man with One Story has an interesting story and the story he tells to each person is different, but he appears to be foreshadowing, which doesn't actually happen, and his disappearances are never explained.

Mason also barely touched on details that might have been very interesting. For example, the spread of malaria, the discovery of the mosquito as a vector, the types of trypanosomes and their discovery and the efforts to combat it are much more interesting, and known to the author who spent some time in Thailand researching it. Yet he gives it a lick and a spit and goes on to herbal abracadabra, which would have been interesting, too, but he touches on it only briefly. Similarly he devotes only a little space to the development of the Erard piano, although this was a marvelous achievement and the inventor was reviled and exiled as a consequence of jealousy of the establishment.

Although the descriptions are boring, the reader does get the flavor of a difficult trip down the river and into the jungle, reminiscent of Heart of Darkness, and does get a sense of the paradise-like beauty of the land. The comparison may be unfair -- Conrad and Mason might be similar because the reality is similar.

The concepts are imaginative and original. This is a first novel, and we haven't received the usual cliches about a violent father and a weak mother that we often get from young writers. I would look into his next book, but if it doesn't grab me by page 50, I won't go on.
17 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Loved it the first time I read it & even more the second time!

The Piano Tuner: I loved this book a second time through.
It's amazingly Informative to delve into a book a second time with a completely different focus than the first. I read this book a few years ago for the story. Now  this time for seeing how the story enhances the setting: Burma during the British occupation days itself. Previously I'd skipped over unpronounceable Burmese names. I still can't properly pronounce the words, but focused on the Shan people. The author spent time in Burma and masterfully includes easy-to-read short bits of history as the story moves along during the main character's weeks' long 5,000 mile journey from London by ship, train, carriage, elephant and canoe to the Shan region. Now we'd hop on a plane, passport with visa, and arrive in less than a day. Love reading what Edgar Drake saw compared with pictures circling in my head after my own visit there last year. To say he was mesmerized by the people and the magical setting is an understatement. We have plans for a bit of trekking to Shan villages in January. I can't wait!
16 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Book Group Dud

Most of the members of my book group thought this book was a dud and would not recommend it to others.
In the group, the English teacher thought reviews that comparision this work to Conrad and other significant writers were ridiculous. The lack of punctuation, the run-on sentences, and the general indifference to grammar make the book a difficult read. At least six times during the book, a character asks, "Am I boring you?" -- If you have to ask six times, you are boring. Trite writing - the days passed, darkness falls over and over... The main text is a narrative. The character does nothing. Novel writing 101 - show us with character action don't tell us with past tense, present tense, and any other tense you can think of in a single paragraph.
The India contingent in our group thought the tiger hunt was a farce. The description was straight from a black-and-white Tarzan movie.
The well-travelled members in our group, thought the writer put on rose-colored glasses and wrote from a travel brochure. There is a beautiful pagoda around every turn.
On the plus side, the book caused members to research the current status of Burma. We were ashamed of our ignorance of the atrocities that occur in the country. The book made us aware of beautiful, troubled land.
16 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

One note novel

Borrowing themes from Graham Greene's The Quiet American and Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, one will enjoy this novel for the descriptions of colonial Burma. The description of Drake's, the titular piano tuner, travels from London to Carroll's stronghold in inner Burma is very interesting. His pacing matches the slow journey from the docks of England and his sailing on the waters of the Mediterranean, his train ride through India and his arrival in Rangoon and the slow boat ride up the river to Mandalay up to his journey to where the Erard Piano is located. This section of the narrative takes up 3/4 of the book and nearing the end pages, it's as if nothing is happening. There are hints and inner musings of Drake on his views about Burma and his dilemma of leaving Burma and a femme fatale for home, but all these are done in a pretty vague way, you feel detached and unsympathetic to the character. When we get to the final twist, it is only mentioned in a few paragraphs thus, it gives a rather hurried ending.

Read it if you're interested in colonial life in Asia, Burmese history and pianos, you'll learn a lot. But if you're looking for a compelling, satisfying if not mind-opening read you can do better by reading his inspirations.
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Let me tell you a story....

"Let me tell you a story" the old man said. "What is the story about?" replied the boy, his eyes bright with anticipation. "A book" said the old man as he settled into his favorite chair. "Is it a good book?" asked the boy. "Listen to the story, then you can decide yourself." And so he began, "There was a writer who loved words, and he loved to put them together into beautiful sentences. His words made the world of old Burma come alive. Spice scents fill the air, flowers glow like beacons, insects sing in the humid, fertile wet-lands. He decided in order to describe this hypnotic place someone from far away would have to view it for the first time. The traveler's reactions would give him an opportunity to write in rich detail about it. This made the man very happy." "So far I quite like this book" smiled the boy. But the old man held up his hand and continued,"And because the feeling of the place was so magical to the writer, he wove fantasies, strange tales, and many dreams into his book." "I like those things" said the boy, "but baba, what is the book about?" "Here is where the problems lie", sighed the man. "The writer made up a very strange circumstance to allow his traveler to reach Burma. It is a circumstance that would never happen, and even as you read his beautiful sentences, you know this." "Well then, what of the traveler?" asked the boy, "will I love him, or hate him, or find him an interesting human being?" "I'm afraid not" sighed the man, "He is almost bloodless in his interaction with the world. As an observer, he is first rate, but that is all. He is a tool to allow the writer to express his lovely words. One thing the traveler does very well though, is he falls into deep reverie, almost a trance, often. Other times he dozes, even in the midst of historical meetings. And when he is in either of these half-waking states, wonderful things happen. Candles glow golden against crimson silks, chopped peppers the color of ox-blood sit pungently in bowls, and bright water courses down beautiful tanned arms of Burmese women" "Well then, is the book well put together?" the youngster asked. "There are many strange things in the make-up of this book" the man replied, "A piano is carried on a journey, by six strong men who find it arduous. Yet, a man and 3 young boys are able to easily lift the piano off a raft while it floats on a river. Quotation marks come and go. Often entire conversations take place without them. I wondered if this was done on purpose to catch the reader off guard, to make one feel off-kilter." "Hmmmm" pondered the boy, "so far you have told me many things about this book, but you did not tell me if you enjoyed it." "I suspended the need for a believable plot or deep characterizations, so yes, I enjoyed reading it" replied the man "but not as much, I suspect, as the author enjoyed writing it."
12 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

The Piano Tuner

Edgar Drake is a quiet, introverted piano tuner living in nineteenth century England. He is considered one of the best in the field, and is an expert on Erard's, a particularly expensive and intricate style of piano. Following a short, hurried letter from Surgeon-Major Anthony Carroll to the British Army, he is located and commissioned by the army to travel to the remote village of Mae Lwin to tune the piano that was just as hastily requested a few months previous. Edgar accepts the mission, journeying to the unfamiliar lands of Burma for reasons that he is not entirely sure are accurate. Once there, he realises that the scanty information given before he left in no way illuminated the intricacies of the British occupation, and some difficult choices must be made.

This is Mason's first novel, and as such there are a number of amateurish errors throughout the novel. Perhaps in a private piece this would be acceptable, but in a published work, the reader putting down his money deserves better. A group of passengers are describe as boring one paragraph, then extraordinary a few later, with accompanying stories. People reveal secrets and motives to Edgar with little or no prompting. Many times, letters and communication is used to provide largely unnecessary background information, and too often, these begin with the words, 'As you may already know...', a phrase which any basic-level writing instructor will tell you is an absolute no-no when writing. Also, the treacheries and betrayals in the end of the novel are ridiculous and contrived, seeming almost to be a way out for an inexperienced novelist who has written himself into a corner.

There are moments of beauty in Mason's writing, however. Lush passages are devoted to the peoples and environments of India and Burma, vibrant, rich sentences that evoke a time and place probably unfamiliar to a lot of people. Much folk-lore and history is revealed to the reader, all of it interesting, though at least half suffers from being presented in letter form. One wishes that the author would have spent the time to refine his writing so that these wonderful stories could have been introduced in a more natural manner. As it is, those parts sometimes read like encyclopedias or textbooks, coming off as unnecessary additions to both pad out the novel's length and wow the reader with the author's depth of research. A particularly glaring error in this vein is the multiple-page exposition on the history of Erard piano's, a completely unnecessary waste of space.

The characters, too, lack anything to make them memorable. Edgar, the main character, never spends the time to analyse his own thoughts and feelings, and thus we are left cold. When he falls in love with Mae Lwin and the people in the village, it is difficult to understand why, because we have seen no growth within his character. The love story is equally simplistic and requires a too-large suspension of disbelief. There are only really three characters of note within the novel, and by the end of it, two of them have been rendered so confusing due to poor pacing and plot, that it is difficult to feel attached to anybody.

Various literary techniques are strewn throughout the novel, often in a haphazard manner. Tenses are changed mid-paragraph, the narrative moves from third person to first as it wills, and the point of view character often changes at the very last sentence of a chapter or section so as to add more weight to Edgar's clumsy fumblings through this alien world. There is a curious sense that, had Mason spent the time to put more stylistic techniques in the novel, it would have actually worked, but since he did not, the addition is yet another nail in the coffin. Very much a case of not enough but far too much, the same could unfortunately be said of the entire novel. While there are passages of great beauty, and while the novel is interesting simply because it describes so well a place unfamiliar to so many, beyond this, there is not much to recommend. A well-written history of Burma would be more enjoyable, much more informative, and not need to worry about an artificial plot with the requisite 'shocking' plot twists that so many novels rely on.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Burmese Seduction

The Piano Turner is one of those rare books that caught me
completely off gaurd. I thought I'd entered the sweet world of
an Englishman commissioned to tune a rare musical instrument
for an military surgeon in a remote corner of Burma. It's the
late 1800s and the sun hasn't yet set on the British empire
and much of the country under colonial rule. The piano turner feels he has a duty to England and queen, and so leaves wife and friends for travel to Burma. There he discovers the rich tapestry of that hot, steamy, tropical land. Tiger hunting, street theater, colonial rule and war are all part of the fast moving plot that seduces the reader into thinking this is nothing more than a first rate adventure tale. It's not. The ending challenges the reader to question everything that took place from the opening paragraph.
10 people found this helpful