Charles Webb has lived on the locked ward for eight months. He's never caused serious trouble. He's never hurt anyone. But the staff of Lakeview Psychiatric Unit has already made up their minds about him-and what they've decided is that he is dangerous, unpredictable, and not worth the effort it would take to understand him. They are wrong about every single part of that. What they don't know-what nobody has bothered to find out-is that Charles is a young man with an intellectual disability and a severe anxiety disorder that has never been properly treated.
The loud, chaotic dining room terrifies him. The comic books he keeps stacked on his shelf are everything he has. And the old Frankenstein movie he plays over and over is the one story he has ever found that makes him feel less alone: a creature that frightened people, even though the creature itself was the one who was most afraid. When the staff storms his room without a second thought and throws out everything he owns-blaming him for something he didn't do-Charles finally breaks.
And the wreckage he leaves behind in the dayroom brings a young clinical worker named Claire face-to-face with a question nobody else has stopped to ask:What actually happened here?The Boy They Buried Alive is a compact, powerful novella about what goes wrong when fear replaces curiosity, when institutions replace people with paperwork, and when the most vulnerable among us are written off before anyone takes the time to truly see them.
It is the story of a young man who learned he didn't matter-and one woman who decided to prove otherwise. It is also, in the end, a story about something far more rare and far more important than a diagnosis or a treatment plan: the simple, life-changing act of one human being deciding that another human being is worth knowing.
Charles Webb has lived on the locked ward for eight months. He's never caused serious trouble. He's never hurt anyone. But the staff of Lakeview Psychiatric Unit has already made up their minds about him-and what they've decided is that he is dangerous, unpredictable, and not worth the effort it would take to understand him. They are wrong about every single part of that. What they don't know-what nobody has bothered to find out-is that Charles is a young man with an intellectual disability and a severe anxiety disorder that has never been properly treated.
The loud, chaotic dining room terrifies him. The comic books he keeps stacked on his shelf are everything he has. And the old Frankenstein movie he plays over and over is the one story he has ever found that makes him feel less alone: a creature that frightened people, even though the creature itself was the one who was most afraid. When the staff storms his room without a second thought and throws out everything he owns-blaming him for something he didn't do-Charles finally breaks.
And the wreckage he leaves behind in the dayroom brings a young clinical worker named Claire face-to-face with a question nobody else has stopped to ask:What actually happened here?The Boy They Buried Alive is a compact, powerful novella about what goes wrong when fear replaces curiosity, when institutions replace people with paperwork, and when the most vulnerable among us are written off before anyone takes the time to truly see them.
It is the story of a young man who learned he didn't matter-and one woman who decided to prove otherwise. It is also, in the end, a story about something far more rare and far more important than a diagnosis or a treatment plan: the simple, life-changing act of one human being deciding that another human being is worth knowing.