Likewise, when Julia's little boys gives his mother's dreadful secret away (and if you don't want to be let in on the secret you shouldn't read the rest of this paragraph) the reader realises how carefully the trail has been laid, and how much of her conversation and behaviour vefore this revelation is explained by her deafness. A deaf pianist; I read on riveted, wanting to know how she will perform in concert with other musicians, how it happened, what it means to her, and I am given answers. Creating suspense and supplying wholly satisfactory resolutions is something this book does wonderfully.What works less well is the idiom of Michael's interior state, the words in which we hear his thoughts. The moment he is left alone to think or fret about music or love he makes me restless. For one, he thinks in slightly elevated prose, girdled with archaisms. It is hard to know why this is, unless high feeling needs heightened diction. This is what he thinks after he gets a letter from his former teacher, Carl Kall: "Strange missile, coming at a time like this when no one could have known, not I, not they, that anything would be amiss among us. He has decided; that is just as well. For Wolf I must be and am glad, but in myself I burn that this man still should claim the right to bless or blast what I may do or not."