The Notes, Catherine Con Morse
The Notes, Catherine Con Morse
List: $25.00 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.50

The Notes

Author: Catherine Con Morse

Narrator: Alice Wen

Unabridged: 8 hr 43 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/30/2024

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

A reserved Chinese American teen at a Southern performing arts boarding school comes into her own under the tutelage of a glamorous new piano teacher. A moving coming-of-age-novel from a debut novelist about first love, adolescent angst, and academic pressures.

“Compellingly readable. Make room in the boarding-school book canon for a new classic.”  - Jeff Zentner, award-winning author of In the Wild Light and The Serpent King

"A moving, highly virtuosic, and heart-rending portrait of an aspiring teen pianist trying to find her way...it made me feel seen." - Patricia Park, author of Imposter Syndrome and Other Confession of Alejandra Kim and What’s Eating Jackie Oh?

Claire Wu isn’t sure that she has what it takes to become a successful concert pianist.

It’s the fear of every student at Greenwood School for the Performing Arts: becoming a washed-out performer who couldn't make it big. And Claire's no Rocky Wong, the ace pianist at their boarding school.

Then Dr. Li shows up.  She’s like no other teacher at Greenwood: mysterious, sophisticated, fascinating. Under Dr. Li’s tutelage, Claire works harder and dreams bigger than ever. And her crush Rocky finally seems interested. Maybe she’ll even be "Chinese enough" to join the elusive Asian Student Society.

Everything is falling into place until eerily personal notes about Claire’s bond with Dr. Li appear. Claire starts to feel the pressure. But she isn't the only one. Everyone is feeling the strain. Especially Rocky, whose extreme perfectionism hides something more troubling.

As the Showcase tension crescendos, Claire must decide if she’s ready to sink or swim. Only then can she discover who she really is and learn if she’s ready to give her all for a shot at greatness.

The Notes is a powerful and poignant debut YA novel from award-winning writer Catherine Con Morse about dealing with academic pressures, falling in love for the first time, and finding yourself.

This program includes a downloadable PDF which includes a playlist of songs mentioned in the book.

About The Author

    Catherine Con Morse was one of the inaugural Writers in Residence at Porter Square Books. A Kundiman fellow, she received her MFA from Boston University, where she taught undergraduate creative writing for several years. Her work appears in Joyland, Letters, HOOT, Bostonia, the Racist Sandwich podcast, and elsewhere. The Notes was shortlisted for the CRAFT first chapters contest and is her first novel.    In high school, Catherine attended the South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities, a public arts boarding school, where she was as intrigued with her teacher as Claire is with Dr. Li. Catherine continues to play and teach piano today. Most recently, she taught English at Choate Rosemary Hall, and lives in the Connecticut River Valley with her husband and daughter.


Reviews

Goodreads review by michal

2 parts self help 1 part literary curiosity. Average it out and it’s a “meh” reading experience, especially if you’ve ever read other fragmentary or aphoristic works (Arcades Project, Wittgenstein, etc etc). My problem with the form is that sometimes a claim strikes you as simply not true, maybe eve......more

Goodreads review by Peter

“The most frequent thought that occurs to me at the sight of another person: ‘How does it survive?’”......more


Quotes

"A compelling exploration of art, identity, and falling in love." —Kirkus Reviews

"This novel shines as an earnest examination of belonging, loneliness, artistic and personal growth, self-doubt, and mental health struggles (including self-harm) among high-achieving performers." —Booklist

"A work that hits notes of high drama but is ultimately lullaby sweet and comforting." —The Bulletin

"A captivating musical coming-of-age novel that sensitively explores racial identity, belonging, and mental illness." —School Library Journal