It takes the average reader 6 hours and 20 minutes to read Enlarging Boston's Spotlight by Dee Ann Miller
Assuming a reading speed of 250 words per minute. Learn more
At the height of Boston''s 1993 Christmas season, the city lay in shock and disbelief. After waking up every morning for months on end to news of how their most infamous priest, James Porter, had been repeatedly shuffled from one flock to another, leaving a trail of wounded children behind with each transfer, it seemed the Archdiocese had scores more like him. With countless more victims yet to be sorted out. Just how could this be! That''s what community mental health nurse Dee Ann Miller, called that morning, as guest author, onto Boston''s popular, drive-time radio, had been asking for seven years, while studying the problems of complicity with abuse in the faith community. One thing she knew for certain: Boston was far from alone. In fact, she predicted they''d soon have plenty of company among Catholics far and wide. Yet, as the wife of an American Baptist minister, she suggested evangelical, teenage girls to be as vulnerable to the same fate as Catholic altar boys. And at least as likely to be brushed aside, when reporting. To Miller, this was a golden opportunity-not only for her as a professional, but also for Boston. If only listeners were ready to absorb what she had to say, move past their shame, shock, and disbelief, find their anger, and channel it into creative action, thereby setting the example for multitudes to come, they could even change the course of history. Of course, that didn''t happen, as any viewer of the 2016 Academy Award-winning movie SPOTLIGHT now knows. Back to sleep they went, somehow assuming their troubles would soon dissipate. Amazingly, so did the journalist who broke the news. In fact, the very article that had the city reeling the morning of that 1993 interview ended up in the Globe''s own lost-and-found, only showing up on the big screen shortly before the 2015 Christmas season. Now, in Enlarging Boston''s SPOTLIGHT, Miller''s back again, further broadening conversations as she has for twenty-three years, giving us amazingly inspiring, eye-witness accounts of events that began unfolding worldwide only months after that interview. It was all largely due to a growing, passionate, and newly-organized, international movement called Linkup. Made up primarily of Catholic survivors and advocates determined to raise their collective voice, this advocacy coalition was led by powerful, caring men and women who dared believe that prophetic truth, even spoken outside the confines of religion, is sacred. She shows how the astounding turn of events that took place in Boston, in 2002, was due in part to the inspiration of this group, whose young leader lay dying just as the Globe''s story broke. Meanwhile, she tells of the personal roller coaster she and her husband Ron have lived in their often-unpopular stands. By weaving together stories of readers she''s followed for years, she reminds us that hope is not always found where we expect to see it. It comes from the grassroots as the "little ones" confound the powerful through individuals and, in this case, through the miracle of the worldwide web, whose advent allowed Miller''s own work to mushroom beyond all expectations within five years of the Boston interview. In the end, she invites us to see both the progress and the challenges ahead-not only in the faith community but in multiple institutions beyond, wherever complicity with evil continues to surface. Finally, she puts America in its place, contrasting a nation that''s dared to elect a President caught on tape boasting of his immoral, abusive acts toward women, with communities filled with courageous men of diverse faiths in remote corners of the world, now standing up to gender-based violence, setting examples for generations to come. Casting the widest net of all, she suggests that activists will discover insights in this story for tackling any human rights issue, wherever institutions stand in the way of progress.
Enlarging Boston's Spotlight by Dee Ann Miller is 380 pages long, and a total of 95,000 words.
This makes it 128% the length of the average book. It also has 116% more words than the average book.
The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes 8 hours and 39 minutes to read Enlarging Boston's Spotlight aloud.
Enlarging Boston's Spotlight is suitable for students ages 12 and up.
Note that there may be other factors that effect this rating besides length that are not factored in on this page. This may include things like complex language or sensitive topics not suitable for students of certain ages.
When deciding what to show young students always use your best judgement and consult a professional.
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