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The Piano Teacher
Description
In the sweeping tradition of The English Patient, a gripping tale of love and betrayal set in war-torn Hong Kong
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 as World War II overwhelms their part of the world. Will is sent to an internment camp, where he and other foreigners struggle daily for survival. Meanwhile, Trudy remains outside, forced to form dangerous alliances with the Japanese--in particular, the malevolent head of the gendarmerie, whose desperate attempts to locate a priceless collection of Chinese art lead to a chain of terrible betrayals.
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 heady social life of the expatriate community. At one of its elegant cocktail parties, she meets Will, to whom she is instantly attracted--but as their affair intensifies, Claire discovers that Will's enigmatic persona hides a devastating past. As she begins to understand the true nature of the world she has entered, and long-buried secrets start to emerge, Claire learns that sometimes the price of survival is love.
About the Author
Janice Y. K. Lee was born and raised in Hong Kong and went to boarding school in the United States before attending Harvard College. She is a former features editor at Elle and Mirabella magazines in New York. The Piano Teacher is her first book.
Praise for The Piano Teacher…
THE PIANO TEACHER is laced with intrigue
Readers will be enthralled by Lees depiction of Wills relationships with his two lovers Claire, with her blond and familiar femininity, English rose to Trudys exotic scorpion and the unsparing way Lee unravels them.
New York Times Book Review
Evocative, poignant and skillfully crafted, THE PIANO TEACHER is more than an epic tale of war and a tangled, tortured love story. It is the kind of novel one consumes in great, greedy gulps, pausing (grudgingly) only when absolutely necessary
If we measure the skill of a fiction writer by her ability to create characters and atmosphere so effortlessly real, so alive on the page, that the reader feels a sense of participatory anxiety as if the act of reading gives one the power to somehow influence the outcome of purely imaginary events then Lee should be counted among the very best in recent memory.
Chicago Tribune
Lee delivers a standout debut
.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.
Publishers Weekly (Starred)
War, love, betrayal an exquisite fugue of a first novel
Intensely readable
O, The Oprah Magazine
the novel is sustained by elegant prose and a terrific sense of place. As Graham Greene evoked Vietnam in The Quiet American, Lee, born and raised in Hong Kong long after the war, captures the city as it was during World War II, its glittering veneer barely masking the panic and corruption beneath.
Miami Herald
Lee is at her best when describing the horrors of the blood-soaked occupation. She paints a compelling portrait of the devastating choices people make in order to survive
Time Out New York
This seasons Atonement
The riveting narrative follows Claire, a conventional, middle-class British girl, as she moves to Hong Kong in the 1950s with her civil servant husband and is transformed, E.M Forster style, by the freedom of the exotic place. The book has an incredibly escapist pull
reading The Piano Teacher is the perfect vicarious voyage.
Elle Magazine
A lush examination of East-West relations.
Kirkus Reviews
Janice Y. K. Lee delivers a standout debut
The Boston Globe
immensely satisfying debut.
People (4 Stars)
Lee tells two engrossing love stories
.Just hide your phone before cracking this one openor risk calling your ex.
Marie Claire
East meets West, and peace meets war, in a compelling debut novel.
Body & Soul
Sensual and gripping
Good Housekeeping
Janice Y.K. Lee makes a powerful entry into the literary world with this lush, intriguing novel
January 09 Indie Next List, Bill Cusumano, Nicolas Books
Lee has created the sort of interesting, complex characters, especially in Trudy, that drive a rich and intimate look at what happens to people under extraordinary circumstances.
Booklist
Rarely does one encounter a debut work as beguiling and assured as Janice Lees THE PIANO TEACHER. Rich with intrigue, romance, and betrayal, this wonderfully written, utterly captivating novel dazzles with its sharp-eyed renderings of beau-monde Hong Kong as it is plunged into the crucible of war. With its fascinating interplay of East and West and wide cast of effervescent characters, especially the singularly haunting Trudy Liang, this is a truly transportingand indeed irresistiblework of fiction.
Chang-rae Lee
This is a rare and exquisite story. It does exactly what a great novel should do transports you out of time, out of place, into a world you can feel on your very skin.
Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love
One of the most insightful, elegant, and atmospheric novels Ive read in a long time. Janice Lee is nothing short of brilliant and her novel is impossible to put down.
Gary Shteyngart



