"A moving and riveting memoir about one family's love and tragedy...beautifully researched, and expressed" (Anne Lamott). Early one Tuesday morning John Brooks went to his teenage daughter's room. Casey was gone, but she had left a note: The car is parked at the Golden Gate Bridge. I'm sorry. Within hours a security video showed Casey stepping off the bridge. Brooks spent several years after Casey's suicide trying to understand what led his seventeen-year-old daughter to take her life. He examines Casey's journey from her abandonment at birth in Poland, to the orphanage where...
"A moving and riveting memoir about one family's love and tragedy...beautifully researched, and expressed" (Anne Lamott). Early one Tuesday mornin...