3.5 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

John Maltravers had followed the usual route from Eton to Oxford that the people of his class often took. He had an uneventful two years there. He met William Gaskell, who was equally talented as him in music, and they got along really well. One summer, Gaskell was taken to Europe by a wealthy uncle. As a gift, he brought back some sheet music and a book for Maltravers.

After they had spent the evening together, Gaskell left the music with Maltravers. He decides to have a go at playing some of the scores from the velum book. He selects a piece of music, and as he plays the opening bars on his violin, he hears someone sit down in the wicker chair behind him. On finishing the piece, there is the sound of someone standing up behind him. He knows he is alone, and he can’t see anyone at all in the room.

The same phenomenon happens when he and Gaskell play that particular piece of music. It was slightly strange, but not unnerving. However, the next time he plays the same tune, everything takes a much sinister turn…

Maltravers spends the summer back in Dorset and on returning to Oxford, finds that the phenomena he had experienced before seems to have abated. On rearranging the bookshelves in the room, he spots a hinge on a panel. He forces it open, and in the room behind it is a very dusty violin.

It turns out that this instrument is a Stradivarius and a fine example too. Maltravers has it serviced and restored. When he first gets to play it, he has no idea as to the changes it will bring to his life. I won’t elaborate any more than that, as any more would really spoil the story.

I did think that the plot was fairly good, and even though it is only a short book, it did feel like it took an age for things to happen and to reach a conclusion. It is very big on Victorian Gothic melodrama, and every now and again, I found the language to be a bit flowery for my liking. Falkner is great about writing about place, and I really liked the scenes set in Dorset and Italy. I haven’t read his book, Moonfleet, but might do so at some point.

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