Difference between revisions of "Echo Montgomery Garrett"

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'''{{FULLPAGENAME}}''' is a journalist who has spent her career finding and writing stories that matter.
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'''{{FULLPAGENAME}}''' is a journalist who has spent her career finding and writing stories that matter.<ref name="LHPbio">{{REFweb
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|url=https://www.lucidhousepublishing.com/echo-montgomery-garrett
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|title={{FULLPAGENAME}}
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|publisher=Lucid House Publishing
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|accessdate=2024-05-15
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}}</ref>
  
From the moment she and [[Georganne Chapin]] first spoke about "[[This Penis Business]]," Echo knew this project was a social justice issue that had the potential to change millions of lives. As the mother of two sons, she had questioned the routine practice of [[circumcision]] when they were born but couldn't find anyone among her peers who had not had their sons cut. She later joined the sisterhood of [[regret mom]]s, who were pressured by medical professionals to circumcise, and has since dedicated herself to getting the truth about this medically bogus surgery that irreversibly harms boys and the men they will become into the American public's conscience.
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From the moment she and [[Georganne Chapin]] first spoke about "[[This Penis Business]]," Echo knew this project was a social justice issue that had the potential to change millions of lives. As the mother of two sons, she had questioned the [[Routine Infant Circumcision| routine practice]] of [[circumcision]] when they were born but couldn't find anyone among her peers who had not had their sons cut. She later joined the sisterhood of [[regret mom]]s, who were pressured by medical professionals to circumcise, and has since dedicated herself to getting the truth about this medically bogus surgery that irreversibly harms boys and the men they will become into the American public's conscience.<ref name="LHPbio"/>
  
A graduate of Auburn University, Echo has co-authored, contributed to, or ghostwritten twenty-five nonfiction books, including "Why Don't They Just Get a Job: One Couple's Mission to End Poverty in their Community," by Liane Phillips, which won the Independent Book Publishers Association Benjamin Franklin Award in the Social Issues category. Echo also co-authored with Sam Bracken "My Orange Duffel Bag: A Journey to Radical Change." She co-founded the Orange Duffel Bag Initiative (ODBI), a nonprofit that provides life plan coaching and ongoing advocacy to young people ages 14-24, who are experiencing poverty, homelessness or aging out of foster care. The book won two international awards for best book design, and five awards for best young adult non-fiction and best self-help, including the American Society of Journalist and Authors Arlene Eisenberg Award for Writing that Makes a Difference.
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A graduate of [https://www.auburn.edu/ Auburn University], Echo has co-authored, contributed to, or ghostwritten twenty-five nonfiction books, including "Why Don't They Just Get a Job: One Couple's Mission to End Poverty in their Community," by Liane Phillips, which won the Independent Book Publishers Association Benjamin Franklin Award in the Social Issues category. Echo also co-authored with Sam Bracken "My Orange Duffel Bag: A Journey to Radical Change." She co-founded the Orange Duffel Bag Initiative (ODBI), a nonprofit that provides life plan coaching and ongoing advocacy to young people ages 14-24, who are experiencing poverty, homelessness or aging out of foster care. The book won two international awards for best book design, and five awards for best young adult non-fiction and best self-help, including the American Society of Journalist and Authors Arlene Eisenberg Award for Writing that Makes a Difference.<ref name="LHPbio"/>
  
Echo is co-founder (with her son Connor Judson Garrett) and CEO of Lucid House Publishing, LLC, publisher of both "[[This Penis Business]]" and [[Marilyn Milos]]'s "[[Please Don't Cut the Baby]]!"
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Echo is co-founder (with her son [[Connor Judson Garrett]]) and CEO of Lucid House Publishing, LLC, publisher of both "[[This Penis Business]]" and [[Marilyn Milos]]'s "[[Please Don't Cut the Baby]]!"<ref name="LHPbio"/>
  
She and her husband Kevin Garrett, who photographed the [[Skin in the Game: Circumcision Cuts Through Us All]] campaign, reside in Marietta, Georgia, USA.
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She and her husband Kevin Garrett, who photographed the [[Skin in the Game|Skin in the Game: Circumcision Cuts Through Us All]] campaign, reside in Marietta, {{USSC|GA}}, [[USA]].<ref name="LHPbio"/>
  
 
{{SEEALSO}}
 
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* [[Please Don't Cut the Baby]]
 
* [[Please Don't Cut the Baby]]
 
* [[This Penis Business]]
 
* [[This Penis Business]]
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* [[United States of America]]
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* {{URLwebsite|https://www.lucidhousepublishing.com|2024-05-15}}
  
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{{REF}}
* {{URLwebsite|https://www.lucidhousepublishing.com/echo-montgomery-garrett|2024-05-15}}
 
  
 
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Latest revision as of 13:45, 15 May 2024

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Echo Montgomery Garrett is a journalist who has spent her career finding and writing stories that matter.[1]

From the moment she and Georganne Chapin first spoke about "This Penis Business," Echo knew this project was a social justice issue that had the potential to change millions of lives. As the mother of two sons, she had questioned the routine practice of circumcision when they were born but couldn't find anyone among her peers who had not had their sons cut. She later joined the sisterhood of regret moms, who were pressured by medical professionals to circumcise, and has since dedicated herself to getting the truth about this medically bogus surgery that irreversibly harms boys and the men they will become into the American public's conscience.[1]

A graduate of Auburn University, Echo has co-authored, contributed to, or ghostwritten twenty-five nonfiction books, including "Why Don't They Just Get a Job: One Couple's Mission to End Poverty in their Community," by Liane Phillips, which won the Independent Book Publishers Association Benjamin Franklin Award in the Social Issues category. Echo also co-authored with Sam Bracken "My Orange Duffel Bag: A Journey to Radical Change." She co-founded the Orange Duffel Bag Initiative (ODBI), a nonprofit that provides life plan coaching and ongoing advocacy to young people ages 14-24, who are experiencing poverty, homelessness or aging out of foster care. The book won two international awards for best book design, and five awards for best young adult non-fiction and best self-help, including the American Society of Journalist and Authors Arlene Eisenberg Award for Writing that Makes a Difference.[1]

Echo is co-founder (with her son Connor Judson Garrett) and CEO of Lucid House Publishing, LLC, publisher of both "This Penis Business" and Marilyn Milos's "Please Don't Cut the Baby!"[1]

She and her husband Kevin Garrett, who photographed the Skin in the Game: Circumcision Cuts Through Us All campaign, reside in Marietta, GA, USA.[1]

See also

External links

References

  1. a b c d e REFweb Echo Montgomery Garrett, Lucid House Publishing. Retrieved 15 May 2024.