Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Review: Inside the O'Briens

Inside The O'Briens
By Lisa Genova
Gallery Books April 2015
352 pages
Read via Netgalley

Inside the O'Briens 

Joe O'Brien is a police officer working outside of Boston. He is proud of his job, his community, and especially his family. He has been married to Rosie, the love of his life, for years and they have four very different grown-up children - Katie is a yoga instructor, Megan is a ballet dancer, JJ is a married firefighter, and Patrick is a bartender.  Being a cop is a stressful job, so when Joe unexpectedly falls, gets angry over little things, and finds it difficult to keep his train of thought, he blames it on the job. But Joe soon learns that he has Huntington's Disease, which is 100% fatal and each child has a 50% chance of getting the degenerative illness.

I applaud Lisa Genova for shedding light on a disease that doesn't get a lot of attention. Huntington's is a horrible illness and she spares readers none of the pain. We see the frustration as Joe's body and mind refuse to do what he wants and the terror as he wonders which of his children will die in the same awful way. We watch Joe's wife and children as they are helpless to do anything to help the man they love. 

This book could have easily become overly sentimental. But Genova strikes the perfect balance here. Joe, Rosie, and each of the children have to come to terms with living the life they have been given. For some of them, it will mean the knowledge of a terrible end. Others choose not to know if they have the gene for the disease. Each one of them pushes their loved ones away and then clings to them anew as they recognize the frailness of life and their familial bonds.

Inside the O'Briens is a difficult book to read, as we contemplate our own mortality along with the characters. Gigantic choices about health and the future are juxtaposed with the everyday joys and frustrations of family life. The O'Briens are a family you can't help but love as you bear witness to their most joyful days and their darkest moments.

8 comments:

  1. Liked this one. Poignant, emotional and factual all rolled into one.

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    1. Yes! I think she did a great job of bringing this terrible disease to life without making it overwhelmingly emotional.

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  2. This sounds like a wonderful book. I'll add it to my list.

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    1. Let me know what you think when you read it!

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  3. I've been wondering about this one as I've read everything else the author has written. I haven't seen this one around a whole lot so I was starting to wonder if it wasn't making as big of a splash as her other books. I really like these difficult and depressing books, lol, not sure what that says about me!

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    1. I know the feeling. I was trying to find something light to send to my sister, but I couldn't find anything. Yikes!

      Do you have a favorite from her other books??

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  4. I haven't read anything else by this author, but like Jennifer, I do like this kind of a book. Definitely one I'd like to get to!

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    1. It was my first time reading one of her books too. But I appreciate that she brings light to these conditions and the people who are living with them.

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