Here's a polished product-page description you can use for KDP/Amazon:
At twenty-nine, pediatric speech-language pathologist Mila expects the usual young-family chaos-sticky fingers, Friday dinners, code deploys from her husband Daniel-not a diagnosis of early-onset Alzheimer's. Refusing to surrender their life to fear, Mila and Daniel build a "Memory Room," an ever-evolving system of rails, labels, and gentle rituals-Tuesday treaties, friendly arrows, an Orange Folder for future kindness, and a "Sunset Script" that helps evenings stay soft when the light frays.
As Mila's overbearing mother resists the truth and Daniel's high-achieving father urges him to take their three-year-old Junie and leave, the couple chooses a different story: one where design, humor, and consent make love practical. With neighbors who show up (and know when not to), a school that kneels to greet, and a marriage that keeps saying yes, they learn how to stay-imperfectly, tenderly-inside a changing brain.
The Memory Room is a luminous, quietly funny novel about caregiving and autonomy, about the small architectures that let dignity survive: a bell by the door, a runway of baseboard stars, a handwritten card that says you're home. For readers who love intimate family stories with heart, hope, and useful grace, this book offers both comfort and craft-proof that when memory loosens, love can still hold.
Themes: early-onset Alzheimer's, marriage under pressure, mother-daughter boundaries, father-son expectations, community care, neurodiversity-informed design, choosing to stay.
Perfect for book clubs-packed with moments to discuss: who decides, how to help without fixing, and what "home" means when remembering is a team sport.