Summary ~ The Piano Teacher by Janice Y. K. Lee ~
In 1942, Will Truesdale, an Englishman newly arrived in Hong Kong, falls headlong into a passionate relationship with Trudy Liang, a beautiful Eurasian socialite. But their love affair is soon threatened by the invasion of the Japanese, with terrible consequences for both of them, and for members of their fragile community who will betray each other in the darkest days of the war.
Ten years later, Claire Pendleton comes to Hong Kong and is hired by the wealthy Chen family as their daughter’s piano teacher. A provincial English newlywed, Claire is seduced by the colony’s heady social life. She soon begins an affair, only to discover that her lover’s enigmatic demeanor hides a devastating past.
As the threads of this spellbinding novel intertwine and converge, a landscape of impossible choices emerges—between love and safety, courage and survival, the present and, above all, the past.
Janice Y. K. Lee’s The Piano Teacher was not what I expected. Not in way of the story but in how I wished to love it from beginning to end. The first sixty pages or so were slow, unable to grasp my attention for more than a few moments at a time and were full of characters that I couldn’t become emotionally invested in. Then the arrival of WWII and all that came with it turned the great city of Hong Kong and it’s civilians upside down and with those events a new book emerged to me. A book full of mystery, deception, love, risk, and horrific descriptions of how brutal war can be.
The Piano Teacher is the story of a young British woman named Claire, fresh off the boat in Hong Kong and fresh into a world she didn’t know existed. She is married to Martin, an older Englishman who concerns himself with work at the Waterworks plant and not with the events that soon fill up his wife’s days. Claire surprises herself by taking up a position with a Chinese family as their young daughter’s piano teacher. The affiliation with the Chen’s opens a new world to Claire, full of party invitations, a whole new circle of people and an introduction to Will, the man who will sweep her off her feet and change her life forever. Will has a story to tell but he doesn’t share details easily. The first part of The Piano Teacher flips between 1952 and Claire’s torrid affair with Will and ten years prior, telling the stories of Will before WWII and the love of his life, Trudy.
The Piano Teacher is a rich, disturbing and refreshing look at WWII. It shows the reader the horrors that more than likely occurred on the other side of the world. Living in Okinawa, I am familiar with the history of the Japanese invasion of this little island. In The Piano Teacher you read of the Japanese invasion of another small area of the Orient. If you are a fan of the 1987 film, Empire of the Sun, this may be the book for you. Empire of the Sun is one of my all time favorite films based on the autobiographical novel by J. G. Ballard which tells the story of a young boy who is separated from his family when Japanese Forces invade Shanghai and he is sent to a work camp where he survives the war.
If you have the patience to get through the first few chapters of The Piano Teacher, and maybe you will love it right from the start, this book is worth the time investment. The characters become vivid and the story builds and builds as the war escalates and reaches the corners of the globe.
{Rating ~ 3.75 out of 5}