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Set in the late 1880s, an English piano tuner is practically ordered by the British War Office to visit Burma in order to tune a fancy piano for an army doctor that is doing the Good Imperial Work in the hinterlands near the Siamese border. The first couple hundred pages are slowly rolled out with his leave-taking of his wife of 18 years and his travel all the way to southeast Asia. In Burma, the piano tuner – and the reader – mainly kills time, waiting for something terrible to happen. The descriptions of the geography have great interest. I like novels in which expatriates are besotted by the beauty of a new place, so the nature writing is the best part of the novel, Too true that the characters are thin, the incidents few, the pace slow, But given the writer's intention was to evoke a particular place and time, I think he succeeded.