
Jeremy Denk, a professional musician, writes a memoir about how he became a concert pianist. Denk tells us about his alcoholic mother and his workaholic father. Although Denk is a piano prodigy, he admits he has faults. Plenty of faults.
Denk routinely makes the same mistakes over and over again. Denk, both insecure and arrogant, admits he didn’t study or rehearse or prepare for key recitals. Most of the time when Denk does this, his performances crash and burn. You would think he would learn from this…but a chapter later, the same thing happens.
Jeremy Denk loves music, but he struggles with instruction. Denk’s teachers try to advise him, help him, show him how to improve his playing…but it’s an uphill journey with this guy.
I’ve known many gifted but wayward students like Jeremy Denk. They’re talented, clever, even brilliant. But, some of them become resistant to change believing they know more than their teachers.
Allowing the reader to see deep personal flaws borders on bravery. Denk didn’t have to share his failures in romance, various performances, and personal relationships but he does in Every Good Boy Does Fine. Those of you that have more musical knowledge–and maybe even play the piano–will get plenty of insights into the classical music Denk plays as he expounds on them.
If you’re interested in how someone from a dysfunctional background manages to overcome his situation to rise to stardom, Every Good Boy Does Fine shows how. Do you like classical music? GRADE: A











