Every Day I Fight
By (Author) Stuart Scott
Penguin Putnam Inc
E P Dutton & Co Inc
15th January 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
News media and journalism
Sporting events and management
Coping with / advice about illness and specific health conditions
070.449796092
Paperback
320
Width 134mm, Height 203mm
265g
Shortly before he passed away in January 2015, much-loved U.S. sports commentator Stuart Scott completed work on this memoir. It was both a labour of love and a love letter to life itself. Not only did Stuart relate his personal story, he shared his intimate struggles to keep his story going. Struck by appendicular cancer in 2007, Stuart battled this rare disease with tenacity and vigour. He wanted to be there for his daughters as an immutable example of determination and courage. Every Day I Fight is a saga of love and an inspiration to us all.
In his posthumously released memoir, Every Day I Fight, the ESPN anchor chronicles the battle with cancer that ultimately claimed his life but never took his spirit.The most poignant takeaway of Scotts battle: Having cancer didnt make him a fighter. He was a fighter long before cancer, so trying to stay alive was natural, not extraordinary.Stephen A. Crockett, Jr., TheRoot.com
"Scott's candor and combative energy are what drives his story...Being a conscientious journalist, Scott diligently, unsparingly reports on what was going on inside his head and in his personal life through treatment, remission and the return of the disease. In recounting every mood swing, every surge of hope and dread, he is imparting a lesson to his daughters, Taelor and Sydniand to us: 'I want them to take every note of every moment and to make them count.'"USA Today
"After a seven-year struggle with cancer, Scott, an ESPN SportsCenter anchor and commentator who died in January, wrote this memoirwith Platt (Only the Strong Survived)with the same out-of-the-box energy that he brought to his shows... Baring his soul and not backing down, Scott reveals his physical and psychological pain, writing that he knew he needed to be strong because he 'wanted to walk Taelor and Sydni down the aisle.'... Scott taught his daughters that 'life consists of two dates with a dash in between,' and judging by this inspirational narrative, Scott has made that dash significant."Publisher's Weekly (starred review)
Amemorable, joyful ode to a life well-lived and well-loved. As Scott would say: 'Booyah.'"Marilyn Dahl, Shelf Awareness
Scott writes about illness and loss with a relentless energy that makes this the happiest sad book I can recall. The book is a lot like Scott on television over the top, irresistibly sincere. He has not produced a standard strength-through-adversity tale. Trust me, he says to the people praising his fortitude after his illness became public, I aint courageous. I just dont want to die. And there are two simple reasons Scott did not want to die: his young daughters, Taelor and Sydni.Every Day I Fight, which Scott wrote with journalist Larry Platt, is the only possible title for this book. Thats because fighting for safety, for fun, for team, for family, for life was a big part of being Stuart Scott.Scotts unforgettable phraseology crosses over into his experience with cancer.Stuart Scott was loving and he was loved, and then he was gone. But in these pages, this loudest of voices reveals the quiet dignity of his fight.Carlos Lozada, The Washington Post
An uplifting read.The power of Scotts memoir is that it invites readers to think about how to handle the inevitable, either as a patient or a patients friend or loved one.Scott wanted to leave something behind for his daughters about his life and struggle. He ended up leaving something of value for all of us.Neil Best, Newsday (Long Island, NY)
In Every Day I Fight, ESPN anchor Stuart Scotts posthumous memoir, his voice is as distinctive and memorable as it ever was on-air.Sherryl Connelly, New York Daily News
"Theres a lot of pain and sadness within the covers ofthis book, but theres inspiration and humor, too. To the very end, Scott was, as he would say, cooler thanthe other side of the pillow."Booklist
"If you get that dire diagnosis, I hope by seeing Stu in action, that it will take away some of the anxiety that you can't live your life, that you can't work out, that you can't work. And seeing him thrivingnot surviving, but thrivingI think people will take that and apply it to whatever it is that they are faced with."Robin Roberts
"There are a lot of people who see [Scott] as a beacon of light, and something that they can relate to....I hear from people every day. He's on TV and he's doing what he loves. They take strength from the fact that he has not been paralyzed by his illness and that he has decided to live life on his own terms."Doug Ulman, president and CEO of the Livestrong Foundation
"I thought I knew what tough was. But, in his battle with cancer, Stuart Scott is the strongest person I know. The courage he shows inEvery Day I Fightwill inspire you, as he has inspired me."Charles Barkley
"I've known Stuart Scott since we were undergrads at UNC and I watched him become a groundbreaking sportscaster. ButEvery Day I Fightshows his greatest accomplishment: as a dad, who fights for his daughters every day. As a journalist, a dad and a cancer fighter, there's no quit in Stuart."Michael Jordan
Stuart Scott was an anchor and commentator for ESPN's SportsCenter. He was the lead host for the NBA on ESPN and ABC, as well as a host on Monday Night Football since that program moved to ESPN in 2006. His unique style and vocabulary made him one of the network's most popular and recognized anchors. He won the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance at the 2014 ESPY Awards. He died in January 2015.