ALS stole his voice, AI retrieved it
By
Biju Kumar
Four years ago, Casey Harrell sang his last bedtime nursery rhyme to his daughter.
By then, ALS had begun laying waste to Harrell’s muscles, stealing from him one ritual after another: going on walks with his wife, holding his daughter, turning the pages of a book. “Like a night burglar,” his wife, Levana Saxon, wrote of the disease in a poem.