Full disclosure, I'm an employee of the university featured in this book, so I heard some of the stories before and knew a couple of the students included in the book. Still, it's an interesting look at how Georgia State University became a national model for student success.
The story is really about Dr. Tim Renick and his passion for helping students of all backgrounds to succeed in college. It's told using data to backup the students' success rates and also features a university president, Dr. Mark Becker, who was willing to try radical techniques to improve first generation college student graduation rates. The two also tackled overall graduation rates and student retention among those with financial, not academic, challenges.
Other internal Georgia State supporters included Dr. Alison Calhoun-Brown, vice president of students, who fully shared Dr. Renick's vision. Detractors included Dr. Fenwick Huss, the dean of the business college and Dr. Risa Palm, the university provost.
In the style of character-driven non-fiction, author Andrew Gumbel follows nearly a dozen students and young alumni to demonstrate Dr. Becker and Dr. Renick's plans and how each person's experience unfolds to reach their success.
Early chapters of the book air some dirty laundry of the university and don't paint Dr. Palm in the best light. But the stories of individual students and alum Princeton Nelson, Gabriel Woods, Tyler Mulvenna, Sharon Semple and Fortune Onwuzunike bring the otherwise dry narrative to life and inject human warmth.
Moderately recommend for those familiar with the university, Atlanta or have college age children. Recommend for those interested in reforming higher education.