The most popular work from provocative Austrian Nobel laureate Elfriede
Jelinek, The Piano Teacher is a searing portrait of a woman bound
between a repressive society and her darkest desires. Erika Kohut is a
piano teacher at the prestigious and formal Vienna Conservatory, who
still lives with her domineering and possessive mother. Her life appears
boring, but Erika, a quiet thirty-eight-year-old, secretly visits
Turkish peep shows at night and watched sadomasochistic films.
Meanwhile, a handsome, self-absorbed, seventeen-year-old student has
become enamored with Erika and sets out to seduce her. She resists him
at first--but then the dark passions roiling under the piano teacher's
subdued exterior explode in a release of perversity, violence, and
degradation.