During his stay at Carroll's camp, Edgar falls for a local beauty, learns to appreciate the magnificence of Burma's landscape and customs and realizes the absurdity of the war between the British and the Burmese. Edgar ably tunes the piano, but this turns out to be the least of his duties, as Carroll seeks his services on a mission to make peace between the British and the local Shan people. Things pick up when Edgar meets the unconventional Carroll, who has built a paradise of sorts in the Burmese jungle. The first half of the book details his trip, and while Mason's descriptions of the steamships and trains of Europe and India are entertaining, the narrative tends to drag Edgar is the only real character readers have met, and any conflicts he might encounter are unclear. When he's summoned to Burma to repair the instrument of an eccentric major, Anthony Carroll, Edgar bids his wife good-bye and begins the months-long journey east. Edgar Drake lives a quiet life in late 19th-century London as a tuner of rare pianos. Twenty-six-year-old Mason has penned a satisfying, if at times rather slow, debut historical novel.
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