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Every Note Played
April 2018: Strong Women
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Every Note Played by Lisa Genova - 5 stars
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I played piano for about 10 years. I'm no longer "good" but piano still has a strong nostalgic pull for me.





I always knew it was a devastating disease but this book really gives you a taste of what it is like to be in the body of someone who still has a brilliant mind but a useless body. Heartbreaking.
Karina is a piano teacher at her home in the Boston suburbs. She had once dreamed of being a jazz pianist but Richard's dreams and ambitions always took precedence. Karina knew that her husband was unfaithful to her on numerous occasions but she stayed with him until Grace had graduated high school and went off to college. Even Karina does not know why she was willing to tackle Richard's time-consuming care and it is definitely constant and difficult. Watching him lose weight, mobility, body functions breaks Karina's heart for the embarrassment that she knows Richard feels. Both of them hope that they can apologize to one another for past mistakes and hurts before ALS claims Richard entirely.
I rarely give books 5 stars but when one makes me feel as deeply affected as this one did, I could not give it any less. With a background in biopsychology and neuroscience, Genova knows what she is writing about. I can't imagine how it feels to have ALS but this book gives a good indication of just how horrific it would be. Richard was not at all a sympathetic character but this disease took the fight and inflated ego out of him quite quickly. Karina is no saint but something deep within her saw the man she used to love suffering and she had to help. This is definitely a book that I will remember for a long time to come.