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Stuart Scott (1)

Auteur de Every Day I Fight

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Stuart Scott, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

1 oeuvres 118 utilisateurs 4 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Stuart Scott was born in Chicago, Illinois on July 19, 1965. He received a bachelor's degree in speech communication from the University of North Carolina in 1987. He worked at local news stations in the South for several years before joining ESPN in 1993. He started off on ESPN2, but he soon moved afficher plus to SportsCenter. He was known for infusing his reports with a blend of pop culture references, slang, and exuberant phrases such as Booyah! He also hosted N.F.L. and N.B.A. shows, Dream Job, and Stump the Schwab. He was diagnosed with cancer in 2007. In 2014, he received a perseverance award at the ESPYs, ESPN's televised award ceremony. His only book, Every Day I Fight, was published in March 2015 and appeared on the New York Times bestseller list that same year. He died of cancer on January 4, 2015 at the age of 49. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Stuart Scott

Every Day I Fight (2015) 118 exemplaires

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OK, I am not a sports fan, I do love basketball though. But that is not why I rated this low despite many moments of inspiring quotes from Stuart Scott. I will tell you that I did doze off during the 2nd and 3rd discs which focused on football and why football is so special. I prefer the first and the remaining discs.

My real reasons are that he is a celebrity and has money, a big ego and therefore cannot speak for the majority of cancer patients. Not every one can call up Tiger Woods and get a free ride on his jet. not everyone can afford what is leftover after insurance or Medicare for cancer medications, not everyone can spend money and time during extreme workups so that they look ripped. He did not mention or think of the financial devastation that cancer can cost a family.

It is also everyone's choice of how they deal with cancer. We are all different. If you are in an older age bracket, I believe that will be a huge influence. He did speak about not letting cancer take over your whole life, for him, that meant that he would continue to do sports casting but for others, it may be a focus on photography, painting or music. We are all different.

He is right on quite a few things. I have a pre-cancer which means if I live long enough I will get and die from it or I could die from something else sooner. But that means that I have had friends who have died from the cancer that I have the pre stage, and talked to them and written them and also I try to learn as much as I can about my particular threat. He is right, it is complex, cancer is the ultimate enemy, you cannot really say that you have conquered it. It may be hiding somewhere. You cannot completely trust test results that say you are clear. Cancer can involve some very, very painful physical situations. I will not go into detail. Just being monitored for a precancer for me involves getting bone marrow biopsies. I know that he has been through unspeakable pain.

People fighting cancer do not want to be told that they are courageous, they will probably not feel that they are because they are living in fear. it would be better to ask if you can be there with them, hold their hand or get something, anything for them.

I would recommend this audio book for people who do not have cancer yet and are ardent football fans.
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Signalé
Carolee888 | 3 autres critiques | Nov 4, 2016 |
Every day I Fight invites readers behind the curtain of Stuart Scott’s life. Stuart Scott was never a person to mince his words, so I knew he was going to give it straight – no filters. The beginning of the book Stuart shared a lot of his childhood and the lessons that he learned along the way. He told stories of his father and other people that help shaped him into the man he was. Wow… I had to pause for a minute. THE MAN HE WAS… I get choked up when I think about the word WAS when I refer to Stuart Scott.

I went back and forth listening to the audio version and reading the hardcover copy of this book. I was also granted permission to read the electronic arc (Advance Readers Copy) of the book, but there are some books that you need to hold in your hand, and this book is one of them. I also have to say that Adam Lazarre-White did an exceptional job narrating the audiobook version. There were a few times I had to pause the audio, because he sounded and captured the essence of Stuart Scott so much I thought it was Stuart talking to me.

Stuart Scott shares with readers the moment he found out he had cancer, the treatments he went through, and how his family & friends stepped up to the plate to be there for him. Scott did make it clear that there was no need to go into graphic details of everything he endured during his fight with cancer. The things he did share was more than enough to give us an idea of what he went through on a daily basis. Stuart Scott was a father first – the love he shared for his girls was immeasurable.

Stuart Scott endured a lot with his bout with cancer, but every day he rose to the occasion of Life.

Do the things that matter in your life! Show up for Life!! – that’s what I took away from this book. Speak your truths, because no one can speak it for you. There are so many things I have learned about Stuart Scott – the man and about Life in general from reading this book.

Thank you, Stuart Scott for leaving your fans with gems that they will hold on to for the rest of their days. You will continue to live in our hearts. Forever.
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Signalé
Book_Referees | 3 autres critiques | Apr 28, 2015 |
Stuart Scott was an ESPN broadcaster who recently (January 4, 2015) passed away from appendiceal cancer. Scott has been a part of ESPN since the early 1990s when it was just a small sports channel to today where it is a staple in cable programming. In 2014, Scott won an ESPY-- ESPN's award show-- for outstanding courage during his fight with cancer.

In his posthumously-published memoir, Scott chronicles his childhood-- how he admired his parents for their love for each other; his attempts at playing professional sports; his college life; his early broadcasting career; and his life has a husband and a father, all while weaving the story of defeating cancer.

Every Day I Fight is a testament to Scott, his friends and family, but most importantly to everyone of us: that no matter what life throws at us, you fight it for the people you love.This book will leave tears in your eyes. And as Scott so eloquently said, "When you die, it does not mean that you lose to cancer. You beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and the manner in which you live." Scott and his memoir exemplified that sentiment.
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Signalé
06nwingert | 3 autres critiques | Mar 20, 2015 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
118
Popularité
#167,490
Évaluation
½ 4.4
Critiques
4
ISBN
36
Langues
4

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