For three years Song Yan has filled her Beijing apartment with the tentative notes of her young piano students.
She finds herself adrift, but her husband seems reluctant for a child of their own. It takes the arrival of her mother-in-law, together with sudden strange parcels and stranger dreams, to shake Song Yan from her malaise. Summoned to an ancient house in the heart of the city, can she find the notes she needs to make sense of the pain and beauty in her life?
'There's something here of early Murakami's graceful, open-ended approach to the uncanny... Ghost Music is an evocative exploration of what it means to live fully' New York Times Book Review
'Knits together music and life to touch on something profound' Guardian
Song Yan marries, gives up on her career, and her husband refuses her pleas to have a child. She instead must accommodate her newly arrived mother-in-law, who brings along family secrets. Soon, strange parcels show up on the doorstep. Her dreams become troubling and claustrophobic. Can she make sense of all the pain and beauty in her life?