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Sign up todayThe Piano Tuner
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Learn moreA widower grieving for his young wife. A piano tuner concealing a lifetime of secrets. An out-of-tune Steinway piano. A journey of self-discovery across time and continents, from a dark apartment in Taipei’s red-light district to snow-clad New York. At the heart of the story is the nameless narrator, the piano tuner. In his forties, he is balding and ugly, a loser by any standard. But he was once a musical prodigy. What betrayal and what heartbreak made him walk away from greatness? Long hailed in Taiwan as a “writer’s writer,” Chiang-Sheng Kuo delivers a stunningly powerful, compact novel in The Piano Tuner. It’s a book of sounds: both of music and of the heart, from Rachmaninoff to Schubert, from Glenn Gould to Sviatoslav Richter, from untapped potential to unrequited love. With a cadence and precision that bring to mind Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice, Kazuo Ishiguro’s Nocturnes, and Yasunari Kawabata’s Snow Country, this short novel may be a portrait of the artist as a “failure,” but it also describes a pursuit of the ultimate beauty in music and in love.
Chiang-Sheng Kuo (郭強生) is one of the most exciting storytellers and prose stylists in Taiwanese literature today. He has written a number of novels, essay collections, and plays, of which The Piano Tuner is the first to be published in English. A resident of Taipei, he earned a PhD in drama from New York University and teaches in the Department of Language and Creative Writing at National Taipei University of Education.
Fernando Chien is an experienced audiobook narrator, actor, writer, and director. A magician in training, he has a brown belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
Howard Goldblatt is a translator of Chinese fiction from China and Taiwan, including works by Chiang-Sheng Kuo, Liu Zhenyun, and Nobel Prize winner Mo Ya. A resident of Layette, Colorado, he taught Chinese literature and culture for more than a quarter of a century.
Sylvia Li-chun Lin is a full-time translator and writer. A former teacher and scholar of modern and contemporary Chinese literature and culture, she lives in Lafayette, Colorado.