Your Lie In April Book Report

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Your Lie In April
All eyes are on Kousei, a young prodigious pianist, who people often refer to as a human metronome due to his incredible musical accuracy when performing. He’s winning tournaments left and right, and many spectators believe that he’ll be able to go pro. However, when he mother dies unexpectedly, Kousei breaks down and is no longer able to hear the sound of the piano into which he’s invested so much of his life. Two years later, Kousei is in middle school with his friends Tsubaki and Ryouta, and he still continues to avoid the piano. However, when a fateful meeting with an unpredictable violinist named Kaori be able to shake up his world enough to get him back into the music world?
Kousei drifts through life without purpose now that he can’t experience music in the same way, dragged along by his friends Tsubaki, a hot-headed softball player, …show more content…

Originally brought in as an additional friend for Ryouta’s “date” with Kaori, Kousei is soon pulled to a place he knows all too well: a performance hall where he’s competed many times before. Kaori is a violin player, and today is one of her competitions. And as he watches her perform, Kousei is mesmerized. Kaori plays with a free-spirited feel that has totally contradictory to everything he had learned from his mother. She reinvented the pieces, playing them in the way that they made her feel, rather than playing them strictly to the score. This leads to her failing the competition, but also introduces the sort of duality that permeates the series. Kaori constantly tries to pull Kousei into becoming her accompanying player and pushing his own limits in terms of his performance. She wants him to pour his soul into his work and not worry so much about accuracy. And that’s what Your Lie in April is at its core; it’s about artistic purity and beauty, and the distinction between a recitation and a performance when it comes to

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