Reviews

La pianista by Elfriede Jelinek

lmex's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

fantine729's review against another edition

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5.0

Almost painful to read, but gripping.

sloatsj's review against another edition

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5.0

[bc:The Piano Teacher|764953|The Piano Teacher|Elfriede Jelinek|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1327932142s/764953.jpg|2179325] This is a book that depends on the inner life of the characters and the terrible dynamic between them to drive the story, and the writer’s language to sustain that hurtling energy. For all its very voyeuristic aspects, I don’t quite get how it could succeed as a movie. And I won’t find out because I think it would be awful to watch, despite how much I admire this book, and despite how fetching Isabelle Huppert looks on the cover of my copy.

I read [bc:Wonderful, Wonderful Times|301834|Wonderful, Wonderful Times|Elfriede Jelinek|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1442090279s/301834.jpg|292898] a year ago and it was similar in its deep bleakness. The writing was also excellent but I didn’t like it half as much as The PianoTeacher, mostly because I managed to feel a cake crumb of sympathy and understanding for the twisted main character in the latter, Erica Kohut. The characters in WWT seemed too remote.

Until I had finished I didn’t realize that The Piano Teacher was semi-autobiographical. Elfriede Jelinek lived alone with her mother, her father died in an asylum, she graduated from the Vienna school of music, and obviously has as much trouble navigating the manifest world as Erica Kohut, Jelinek having been unable to leave her apartment to collect the Nobel Prize for Literature because of a generous anxiety level.

This book is not for the weak-stomached or those who like their books uplifting. Nothing uplifting in here! Just the way I like it.

sophiavillanueva's review against another edition

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5.0

Erika, la protagonista de esta historia tiene una relación muy tóxica amor/odio con su madre por lo que lo que conoce como amor no es nada sano. El libro se centra en esta relación y en cómo impacta en la vida de Erika.
Cuando en su vida aparece un estudiante que comienza a interesarse sexualmente en ella es cuando la historia comienza a tomar vuelo hasta llegar a una explosión de violencia en la que Erika siempre es la víctima, tanto de la madre como del estudiante, sin embargo, lo más interesante es la manera en la que llega a acomodarse en ese lugar de víctima a raíz de lo que ella entiende por amor.
La narrativa es difícil y muy distinta a lo que había leído anteriormente, plagada de una atmósfera de locura y divagaciones a cada instante. Esto es lo que me pareció más difícil de esta lectura, sin embargo, al terminar el libro y apreciarse en conjunto es entendible este estilo y forma de narrar e, inclusive, es algo que aporta mucho a las sensaciones que provoca esta lectura, en donde la incomodidad, sin duda, es la que predomina por encima del asco, la desesperación y la indignación que se sienten en muchas escenas.
Reconozco que de haberlo leído sola mi calificación sería menor, sin embargo, el comentarlo en conjunto con otras lectoras me permitió digerirlo y apreciarlo al máximo.

lucrezi's review against another edition

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2.0

"[Walter Klemmer] stares at this woman, who wants to be swept away by bliss, and he asks himself: Who can understand the female sex anyway?" Ah yes. Freud, a fellow Austrian, would agree.

Erika Kohut is the biggest snowflake with the biggest superiority complex I've seen in a while. She is an awful person, but a very interesting character. I liked that each scene peeled back one of her many layers to show just how messed up she is.

Walter Klemmer is the epitome of "men are trash."
SpoilerFunny how he's scandalized by Erika's sadomasochistic desires when their first sexual encounter in the bathroom was very dubious in its consent. It's all about the hunt, never the "prize."


The long and rambly paragraphs weren't my style when the focus was on Vienna and not Erika's inner world. I wish it were tighter. I read this in bed and throughout the first half I kept falling asleep every few pages. I was interested, but not interested enough to enjoy wading through pages and pages of what felt like filler.

2.5, but rounding down to 2.

bookishwendy's review against another edition

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4.0

I was expecting this to be dark...but I didn't think it would be that dark. The Piano Teacher is an incredibly unsexy story of--well, not of love so much as the struggle for absolute control. NYT Book Review accurately called it "an exploration of fascism, not so much in the political sense as in the personal." 38-year-old Erika is a highly repressed piano player/instructor ruled by her emotionally shriveled and manipulative mother. Erika's external shell of a highly cultured artist hides her internal perversions, and highbrow conservatory recitals mingle with images of Vienna's vulgar underworld. When one of her teenage students begins to flirt with her, little does he realize what he's getting himself into.

The demented subject matter alone will turn many people off, so readers who prefer sentimentality and escapism should stay away. However, the writing (even in translation) is poetic and image-rich, the story slow-burning yet gripping, and ultimately mind-bending. The student-teacher affair seems to raise the most eyebrows, but I found the dysfunctional mother-daughter dynamic more disturbing (the less said here, the better). I haven't yet seen the film, but I'd be interested to see how this was adapted--after I've recovered from (and forgotten) the novel, that is.

In lieu of a conclusion, I'll borrow a quote from page 222 that seems like a fitting summary: this book "rips apart lovers and binds together things that the writer keeps separate. The mind twists and turns as it sees fit."

tillydaisym's review against another edition

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challenging dark medium-paced

4.0


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lorees_reading_nook's review against another edition

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challenging dark slow-paced
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

1.75

Real rating 1.8 stars

This book is a dark disturbing story about a depressed young woman and her controlling, deranged (there is really no there word to describe her) mother. Erika self-harms. Her outlook on life is very negative and she is nasty and always wants to be in control. Unsurprisingly, her relationship with both her mother and Walter erupts into violence. She is both a victim and a perpetrator.

The subject matter of this book is so heavy that I could only read a few pages at a time. Erika's situation is so desperate, so desolate that it felt suffocating. In addition, the non-linear timeline, use of obscure metaphors and difficult subject matter made for a very difficult, shocking and challenging read. If that was Jelinek's intention, she was entirely successful but I won't be recommending this book to anyone anytime soon.

libs108's review against another edition

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dark medium-paced

3.0

roododendroon's review against another edition

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dark tense

3.5