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Somebody else kid's

 

            Torey Hayden is my favorite author in the world. I am addicted to books and have read over a thousand, and quite the eclectic mix. and I gotta say, no one even comes CLOSE to Torey!.
             Torey is a special education teacher/psychologist who has written books about her experiences working with emotionally disturbed children in the 70s and 80s. Somebody Else's Kids is the story of a small, close-knit class, comprised of 4 very different students: 7-year-old Boo, who has autism; 7-year-old Lori, who survived physical abuse severe enough to damage her brain to the point where it's nearly impossible for her to read, but who can "read hearts" better than almost anyone; 12-year-old Claudia, shy and sweet and studious, "normal" in every way except one -- she's pregnant; and 11-year-old Tomaso, outwardly full of rage, to hide the inner pain he feels as he mourns the loss of his father.
             These four children captured my heart, and I re-read this book often, for Torey and the children feel like friends to me. Corny maybe, but it's the truth! Torey has a certain magick in working with disturbed children, and often touches the lives of even those children labeled by others as "unreachable." The emotional bonds she has with the children are inspiring and fascinating. She follows her instincts, listens to her gut, and trusts her heart -- which is so big, and seemingly limitless. She accepts the children on their own terms, and is completely devoted to them. .
             In one particularly poignant scene in Somebody Else's Kids, Torey goes on a search for Tomaso, who ran out of the classroom and is hiding somewhere in the school. When she finally finds him tucked away in a tangle of table and chair legs in the back of the dusty auditorium, she, without hesitation, lies down on the floor and gets as close to him as possible, until they're close enough to touch each other if they both reach out their hands. She holds Tomaso's hand tight as he weeps and confesses in a whisper that he wants to die.


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