Summary:
Best Boy is a novel about Todd Aaron, a
54-year-old autistic man who has lived for 40 years in a Payton LivingCenter
(sic); he was involuntarily committed to this facility. Todd has been in five previous
places for congregate living, but Payton seems to be the best for him, thanks
in part to a loving caregiver, Raykene. Todd has accepted the institutional
“Law” of Payton and takes his drugs right on schedule, including Risperdal, an antipsychotic
that slows him down, making a “roof” over him and muffling, he says, “the voice
in my brain.” The story is told from
Todd’s point of view, often with startling imagery: he pictures his dead parents turning into
giant cigars, a raindrop “explodes,” and, when upset, he rocks back and forth and
feels “volts.” Now and then he recalls
that his mother called him her “best boy.”
Into this
stable setting come three personified disruptions. The first two are fellow
patients, Terry Doon (a pun on “doom”?), a brain-injured roommate who teases,
torments, and bullies Todd, and Martine Calhoun. While Terry disrupts Todd’s
living space, Martine is a siren who lures him to different parts of Payton’s
campus; she is also a rebel who urges him to stop taking Risperdal and shows
him how to hide the drug in his hand and get rid of it later.
The third is Mike Hinton, a day staffer who lies,
manipulates, and in general mistreats Todd. Todd understands Hinton as evil and
entertains violence against him—but does not act. Hinton has sex with a female
patient who dies, apparently a suicide, although the language of Payton’s staff,
as reported by Todd, euphemistically hides the truth.
Todd has
the “Idea” of escape and sets out, on foot, to go 744 miles to “home.” A state
policeman soon returns him to Payton.
Now and then Todd’s younger brother
Nate calls, often while drinking. Near the end of the book, Nate and his wife
Beth take Todd to his childhood home, where he had been abused physically and
mentally. In a moving scene, Todd enters the only unchanged area, a crawl space
and feels the return he yearned for.
All three
tormentors leave Payton, and there is a surprising resolution for Todd. The balance and harmony of Payton’s
LivingCenter are restored, and Todd, reminded by Raykene, affirms that
“Somebody always loved me.”
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