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[COD]⇒ Libro Free The Death of Torberta Turchin eBook Shannon Mawhiney

The Death of Torberta Turchin eBook Shannon Mawhiney



Download As PDF : The Death of Torberta Turchin eBook Shannon Mawhiney

Download PDF  The Death of Torberta Turchin eBook Shannon Mawhiney

Torberta Turchin spoke to the dead. But like plants, or rabbits, or any 14-year-old girl, she didn't know that she herself was going to die.

And soon.

Despite her morbid past, Torberta lives a relatively normal life. She goes to school. She hangs out with her friends. She visits the school psychologist on a regular basis. But strange things have been happening lately, and she needs to find out who's behind them... before it's too late for her classmates, and for herself.

The Death of Torberta Turchin eBook Shannon Mawhiney

The Death of Torberta Turchin is a story about a young girl, Torberta (Torby), who can hear voices. Because she talks to these voices, her aunt and uncle send her away to boarding school with children who also have certain mental problems. Torby enjoys spending time at boarding school, because less people treat her differently there.

At first, Torby is relatively content about her voices, who she believes are ghosts. I think it was fun to go along with Torby in figuring out if she was truly crazy or if she really could hear ghosts. When another boy comes to school who can actually see ghosts, Torby is finally convinced of the truth (though her friends were not). When bad things start to happen, we follow Torby through the troubles she faces.

The Death of Torberta Turchin was definitely an interesting and very good book. It was very well written and kept me wanting to read and find out more. I was kind of sad about the ending, though Torby seems to end up happy in the end. There were some questions left over at the end I would love to find out more about.

Product details

  • File Size 632 KB
  • Print Length 314 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publication Date February 19, 2011
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B004OL2ONW

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The Death of Torberta Turchin eBook Shannon Mawhiney Reviews


This little book was quite the read, enjoyed the whole interesting ride till the end.. Hope to hear more from this author in the future.
This is a great piece of fiction that you won't want to put down. If I didn't have to take midterms I would never have stopped reading it. You get caught in the very beginning by this well-written, touching story about a girl named Torby, who you can't help but empathize with. This book has all of the right stuff. It has everything you could want in a story. It's got comedy, tragedy, mystery, and so much more. This book is simply amazing. I love this story and I'm not afraid to say so. If you're like me and you love to read anything you can get your hands on, then you'll love having your hands on this.
This is a gorgeous story. It is completely outside of the cookie cutter world of the mainstream press. It has all the elements that I seek out in indie films and books. Original plot and characters and ideas and world building... I read it in two days and couldn't put it down. Even after the book is done, I'm finding myself thinking about the very complicated ideas the author presented. It is a breath of fresh air!
The Death of Torberta Turchin is not just a Young Adult book. It is written so well that many ages of readers will enjoy this ghostly book. Don't pass this book up just because it is outside your typical genre or recommended age.
Shannon Mawhiney's debut novel is a young adult ghost story you don't want to miss. If you liked "The Dead Father's Club," by Matt Haig or movies like "Ghost," "The Sixth Sense," "The Others," or "Ghost Town," you're going to love "The Death of Torberta Turchin."

This masterfully written novel is about a fourteen-year-old girl, Torberta Turchin, who for nine years has lived in a boarding school for the mentally ill. Her distant relatives (the aunt and uncle of her cousin) put her there after she survived an auto accident in which she witnessed the brutal death of her parents. Following that trauma, not only had she become withdrawn and uncommunicative, but when she did speak, it was only to some ghostly voices that no one else could hear.

Even Torberta (Torby, as she's known to her friends) is unsure if the ghosts are in her head or in her room, so in an attempt to be accepted by her adoptive family, she makes a concerted effort to ignore them, especially (and most painfully) the voice of her ghostly best friend, Charlie.

Of course that effort falls apart the day a boy named Cody comes to the school and can see the very ghosts that Torby is trying to ignore. It seems nothing ruins a good hallucination like someone else experiencing it, too. Unfortunately, that also means the ghostly presence that wants Torby dead is alive and well and will stop at nothing to affect her demise.

Few authors in modern gothic literature go out of their way to develop characters we can truly care about, but we do end up caring about Mawhiney's Torberta. In Torby's struggle to understand why she can't hear her own parents when she can hear so many other ghosts, we come to sympathize with her loneliness and isolation, especially in a world that doesn't seem to want her and over which she has little control.

As such, the story takes the shape of an allegory for an all too common tale in the lives of many real children--that is the story of abandonment. Those who live in state custody, or those who live in special institutions know it very well. Like Torberta Turchin, they are the forgotten ones.

Ironically, the school is called St. Christopher's, and herein we find the central symbolism of the story. St. Christopher is, after all, a martyr and the patron saint of travelers, and it's Torby's final journey via this school, along with her faith in that which is transcendent, that leads her to the hope of love and acceptance.

It's impossible to read "The Death of Torberta Turchin" and come away unaffected. The powerful theme of childhood abandonment forces us to examine our own issues in this regard. If one has ever been abandon through neglect, emotionally abandoned, actually abandoned, or abandoned through the abuse of those who were supposed to love them, this is a novel that will hit home on a gut level.

Ultimately, the concern we feel for Torby keeps us turning the pages as fast as we can. This is not an easy book to set down once you pick it up. As for me, I found it difficult to stay critically focused for this review; I kept being drawn into the story and away from my task at hand.

"The Death of Torberta Turchin" is not to be missed by fans of well-written ghost stories. I hope someone goes to work on the screenplay soon, because this would make a fantastic movie or a Broadway play. Fortunately, the novel is available now on , and the author assures me it will be available in print very soon. I've bought it on , and I'll buy it again in its print edition to keep on my bookshelf.
If I like a book, I usually give it a four, but if I plan on reading the book again I give them five's. I've only given one five before this, and it seems I have no choice as to give this a five. The Death of Torberta Turchin is a powerful story about death and life. It reminded me of that movie "Girl, Interrupted" at first except with a younger crowd. The language is more gentle, and these friends are caring. The whole story doesn't revolve around death, rather about life and how one chooses to live. At one point, Torby chooses another path and loses contact with her dear friend Charlie, but the arrival of Cody changes everything.

I don't like to add too much to avoid spoilers, but Cody's arrival will change everything and you'll be hanging on to every page to find out what's happening. The end, is obvious, but how it gets there and how it is taken, may not be. If you like ghost stories with an emotional touch, this is the book for you.
The Death of Torberta Turchin is a story about a young girl, Torberta (Torby), who can hear voices. Because she talks to these voices, her aunt and uncle send her away to boarding school with children who also have certain mental problems. Torby enjoys spending time at boarding school, because less people treat her differently there.

At first, Torby is relatively content about her voices, who she believes are ghosts. I think it was fun to go along with Torby in figuring out if she was truly crazy or if she really could hear ghosts. When another boy comes to school who can actually see ghosts, Torby is finally convinced of the truth (though her friends were not). When bad things start to happen, we follow Torby through the troubles she faces.

The Death of Torberta Turchin was definitely an interesting and very good book. It was very well written and kept me wanting to read and find out more. I was kind of sad about the ending, though Torby seems to end up happy in the end. There were some questions left over at the end I would love to find out more about.
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