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Books with author Torey Hayden

  • One Child

    Torey Hayden

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 1, 1981)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Hayden recounts her battle to uncover the keen intelligence and touch the emotions of a troubled, sexually molested six-year-old girl who was abused as a younger child and was placed in her class for retarded preadolescents while awaiting space in a state institution.
  • One Child

    Torey L. Hayden

    Mass Market Paperback (Avon, May 1, 1981)
    Finally, a beginning . . . The time had finally come. The time I had been waiting for through all these long months that I knew sooner or later had to occur. Now it was here.She had surprised me so much by actually crying that for a moment I did nothing but look at her. Then I gathered her into my arms, hugging her tightly. She clutched onto my shirt so that I could feel the dull pain of her fingers digging into my skin. She cried and cried and cried. I held her and rocked the chair back and on its rear legs, feeling my arms and chest get damp from the tears and her hot breath and the smallness of the room.
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  • The Tiger’s Child and Somebody Else’s Kids 2-in-1 Collection

    Torey Hayden

    eBook (HarperElement, March 20, 2014)
    For the first time, bestsellers Somebody Else’s Kids and The Tiger’s Child are combined to show Hayden’s extraordinary attempt to rescue the children that no one else wanted to help.In Somebody Else’s Kids, four problem children are placed in Torey Hayden's class because nobody knew what else to do with them. They were a motley group of kids in great pain: a small boy who echoed other people's words and repeated the weather forecast; a beautiful seven-year-old girl brain damaged by savage parental beatings; an angry ten-year-old who had watched his stepmother murder his father; and a shy twelve-year-old who had been cast out of Catholic school when she became pregnant. But they shared one thing in common: a remarkable teacher who would never stop caring – and who would share with them the love and understanding they had never known to help them become a family.In the Sunday Times best seller The Tiger’s Child, Haydon attempts to reconnect with an abandoned teenager she helped as a child. Sheila, a gangly teenager with bright orange hair – is no longer broken and lost, but still troubled and searching for answers. It is up to Hayden to once again answer the call to help a child in need.
  • The Very Worst Thing

    Torey Hayden

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, May 27, 2003)
    David doesn't belong anywhere.He isn't good at school, or talking to people, or making friends. He's been in six different foster homes, and he can't really remember his parents. It seems like he'll never have anything all his own.Then he finds an owl egg. With the help of Mab, the skinny "girl genius" of his class, he names it King Arthur and sets out to hatch and raise an owl of his very own. As they wait for King Arthur to hatch and as they raise the funny-looking owl chick, Mab and David become true friends.But Mab's father thinks they should return King Arthur to the wild. Can David give up his owl? Is it even the right thing to do? What can David do if the worst thing of all happens?
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  • Somebody Else's Kids

    Torey L. Hayden

    Mass Market Paperback (Avon, Aug. 1, 1982)
    "Were all just somebody else's kids . . . "A small seven-year-old boy who couldn't speak except to repeat weather forecasts and other people's words . . . A beautiful little girl of seven who had been brain damaged by terrible parental beatings and was so ashamed because she couldn't learn to read . . . A violently angry ten-year-old who had seen his stepmother murder his father and had been sent from one foster home to another . . . A shy twelve-year-old from a Catholic school which put her out when she became pregnant . . ."What do we matter?""Why do you care?"They were four problem children-put in Torey Hayden's class because no one else knew what to do with them. Together, with the help of a remarkable teacher who cared too much to ever give up, they became almost a family, able to give each other the love and understanding they had found nowhere else.
  • One Child

    Torey Hayden

    Paperback (Element Books, Aug. 1, 2007)
    This beautiful and deeply moving tale recounts educational psychologist Torey Hayden's battle to unlock the emotions of a troubled and sexually abused child who, with the help of Hayden, was finally able to overcome her dark past and realise her full potential. Six-year-old Sheila was abandoned by her mother on a highway when she was four. A survivor of horrific abuse, she never spoke, never cried, and was placed in a class for severely retarded children after committing an atrocious act of violence against another child. Everyone thought Sheila was beyond salvation -- except her teacher, Torey Hayden. With patience, skill, and abiding love, she fought long and hard to release a haunted little girl from her secret nightmare -- and nurture the spark of genius she recognised trapped within Sheila's silence. This is the remarkable story of their journey together -- an odyssey of hope, courage, and inspiring devotion that opened the heart and mind of one lost child to a new world of discovery and joy.
  • Ghost Girl: The True Story of a Child in Peril and the Teacher Who Saved Her

    Torey L. Hayden

    Hardcover (Little Brown & Co, May 1, 1991)
    Documents the true story of an eight-year-old girl who had refused to talk until her teacher uncovered her horrifying family life amid satanic cultism
  • One Child

    Torey L. Hayden

    Hardcover (Putnam, Jan. 1, 2004)
    A teacher's struggle to save a gifted and troubled girl.
  • Somebody Else's Kids

    Torey L. Hayden

    Paperback (Harper Element, Oct. 1, 2007)
    Rare Book
  • The Tiger's Child

    Torey Hayden

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, July 30, 2002)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A sequel to the best-selling One Child continues the story of the author's gifted and troubled student, Sheila, a victim of child abuse, following the girl's turbulent post-education years as a young adult.
  • The Very Worst Thing

    Torey Hayden

    Library Binding (HarperCollins, May 27, 2003)
    David doesn't belong anywhere.He isn't good at school, or talking to people, or making friends. He's been in six different foster homes, and he can't really remember his parents. It seems like he'll never have anything all his own.Then he finds an owl egg. With the help of Mab, the skinny "girl genius" of his class, he names it King Arthur and sets out to hatch and raise an owl of his very own. As they wait for King Arthur to hatch and as they raise the funny-looking owl chick, Mab and David become true friends.But Mab's father thinks they should return King Arthur to the wild. Can David give up his owl? Is it even the right thing to do? What can David do if the worst thing of all happens?
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  • Ghost Girl

    Torey Hayden

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, July 30, 2002)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A remarkable teacher persuades a young girl to break her self-imposed silence.