By the time this book was over, it was starting to feel like real work. Same crime, different victim over and over and over and over. The victims in the book were mostly a group of Mormons who appeared to practice conscious ignorance of anything sexual. Even still, it was sickening to me that over 50 women and girls had this man stick his penis in them instead of appropriate medical instrumentation during pelvic exams. I just couldn’t fathom how he got away with it for an entire career, spanning decades. I didn’t believe the doctor’s staff were unaware of the Dr’s crimes as he was leaving patients in rooms for hours for routine exams and then the nurses would find rags in the room after with semen on them. The perpetrator was, of course the sick one, and is the one to be held responsible. But, it also read like a cautionary tale in that one who practices conscious ignorance puts ones self in danger because there are bad people who will exploit that ignorance and abuse you. Religion can sometimes have that effect on people’s decisions about sex education and awareness and this book really highlights that problem.