Description
Book SynopsisIn the fall of 1998, George Cantor and his wife sent off their 18-year-old daughter Courtney to the University of Michigan as a freshman. Six weeks later, the university called Cantor to claim her corpse. Courtney fell from her 6th-floor dormitory window after being served drinks illegally at a fraternity party. In Cantor''s grief over losing Courtney, he sank into a bitter and prolonged depression that led him to question the value of his own life and newspaper career. This ended after a year when he was diagnosed with cancer, at which point the value of life suddenly and stunningly was renewed. Cantor elequenty unfolds his and Courtney''s story, revealing that learning that acceptance of the past and celebration of the present is the only way to endure in our increasingly complex world.
Trade ReviewThere are few good things that ever come from tragedies as deep as losing one’s child: Courtney's Legacy is something positive from the wells of despair. A moving, instructive, and ultimately compelling book that makes us all hug our children a little bit tighter. -- Mitch Albom, Author of
Tuesday's with Morrie, author of Tuesdays with Morrie
Fraternity and sorority reform has come a long way since 1990, but George Cantor's disturbing story about his daughter Courtney's tragic death at the University of Michigan teaches us that such reforms still fall deadly short. Mandatory reading for parents sending students to college for the first time. -- Hank Nuwer, author of The Hazing Reader, Wrongs of Passage, and Sons of the Dawn