Torey Hayden

Victoria Lynn Hayden, known as Torey L. Hayden (born 21 May 1951 in Livingston, Montana, U.S.[1]), is a special education teacher, university lecturer and writer of non-fiction books based on her real-life experiences with teaching and counseling children with special needs and also of fiction books.[2]

Torey Hayden
Born21 May 1951
Livingston, Montana, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
Alma materWhitman College
Known forfactual books about her experiences
Scientific career
Fieldsautism, Tourette syndrome, sexual abuse, fetal alcohol syndrome, elective mutism, selective mutism

Subjects covered in her books include autism, Tourette syndrome, sexual abuse, fetal alcohol syndrome, and elective mutism (now called selective mutism), her specialty.

Biography

Hayden attended high school in Billings, Montana and graduated in 1969. She attended Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. She received a master's degree in special education from Montana State University Billings in 1975 and moved to University of Minnesota in Minneapolis for a doctorate in educational psychology. While there, she also worked with the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in the university hospitals.

Hayden moved to Wales in 1980 and married a Scotsman named Ken in 1982. In 1985 they had a daughter (Sheena). Hayden is divorced.[3]

In Wales Hayden has worked primarily with charities associated with child neglect and abuse, including Childline, the NSPCC, the Samaritans and the Citizens' Advice Bureau.[4]

She has written five books of fiction in addition to her non-fiction books (see below).

Works

Non-fiction

  • One Child (1980)
  • Somebody Else’s Kids (1981)
  • Murphy’s Boy (1983) / Silent Boy (British title for Murphy's Boy)
  • Just Another Kid (1988)
  • Ghost Girl (1991)
  • The Tiger’s Child (1995)
  • Beautiful Child (2002)
  • Twilight Children (2005)
  • Lost Child (2019)

Fiction

  • The Sunflower Forest (1984)
  • The Mechanical Cat (1998) / Overheard In A Dream (English title for The Mechanical Cat)
  • The Very Worst Thing (2003)
  • Innocent Foxes (2011) (In UK)

References

  1. "Torey Hayden - Biography". www.torey-hayden.com. Retrieved 2018-04-26.
  2. "The Books". Torey Hayden official website. Retrieved 2018-09-21.
  3. "Biography". Torey Hayden official website. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
  4. "Hall of Fame 2007 Torey Hayden Author". National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Retrieved July 23, 2011.
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