Books@Random Parents Teens@Random Kids@Random
Click Here to Return to Homepage
 
 
BUY THE BOOK ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
AWARDS
READ AN EXCERPT
RELATED LINKS
Search Again
Torn to Pieces
Upgrade to the Flash 9 viewer for enhanced content, including the ability to browse and search through your favorite titles
 
 
Torn to Pieces

Written by Margot McDonnellAuthor Alerts:  Random House will alert you to new works by Margot McDonnell
Juvenile Fiction - Family; Juvenile Fiction - Love & Romance; Juvenile Fiction - Social Situations - Emotions & Feelings | Delacorte Books for Young Readers | Hardcover | September 2008 | $15.99 | 978-0-385-73559-9 (0-385-73559-6)
Also available as an eBook and a hardcover library binding.
  • Add to Good Reads
  • Add to Librarything
  • Add to Shelfari

ABOUT THIS BOOK

SEVENTEEN-YEAR-OLD ANNE ALWAYS thought her mother was kind of quirky. In fact, her mom’s taste in 70s-esque furniture and mysterious frequent business trips were just the tip of the quirky iceberg. When her
mom doesn’t come home on time from one of her long jaunts, Anne isn’t too surprised. But when a day late turns into a few days late, Anne knows something is very wrong.

She tries the hotel number that her mother left her, but it has been disconnected. Then a strange man keeps leaving messages on their answering machine, looking for a woman who doesn’t even live there. However, when Anne discovers a lengthy letter from her mother explaining why she has disappeared, the fabric of Anne’s relatively normal life is torn to pieces. Despite her shock, Anne must pull herself together and protect herself—from people who want to find and hurt her mother, and the strange new boy who may change everything.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Margot McDonnell spends her days reading, writing, traveling, quilting, and enjoying her family and friends. Torn to Pieces is her second novel. She lives in Phoenix, Arizona


AWARDS

NOMINEE 2008 - Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Young Adult Novel



RELATED LINKS

Click here for the Torn to Pieces BookTalk