The Voyage by Murray Bail
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Murray Bail is best known for Eucalyptus, which won the Miles Franklin Award, Australia's premier award for fiction and the Commonwealth Writers' Prize in 1999, but he has a long and distinguished career in both fiction and non-fiction. The Voyage is his fifth novel.
Frank Delage is a small-time Sydney manufacturer, who has invented a new striking mechanism for the piano which produces palpably better sound quality. He has travelled to Vienna to try to sell the concept in the very heart of the music world - coals to Newcastle springs to mind - and now he is on his way back to Australia. He is reflecting on his trip, which he can't regard as anything but a qualified failure. He could just about allow himself to be pleased about having sold one piano, had he not learned what the buyer had in mind for the hapless instrument. With the benefit of hindsight, trying to take on the Viennese music establishment was probably a mistake.
On the other hand, he is returning with Elisabeth, the daughter of a member of Viennese high society, Amalia von Schalla, who took Delage under her wing after they met by chance. And it seems he has learned a great deal about himself along the way.
Bail's first novel, Homesickness (1980), had to do with the distance, both physical and cultural, between Australia and Europe, and The Voyage takes up this preoccupation once again. Delage is something of a novelty for the Viennese, who find both him and his piano baffling and, you suspect, faintly amusing.