The Roanoke Kids from Section C: Carnation

The Roanoke Kids from Section C: Carnation

  • WpView
    Reads 66
  • WpVote
    Votes 1
  • WpPart
    Parts 12
WpMetadataReadMatureOngoing48m
WpMetadataNoticeLast published Fri, May 3, 2019
Four teens have been placed in the Roanoke City Mental Facility for issues ranging from schizophrenia to severe depression and social anxiety, eventually becoming the closest friends in the past 4 months. Each of them are given a diary which they begin to actually write in everyday when a long term patient commits suicide and is found outside of the common area explaining why everyone should care about their diaries since if she would've cared and used it earlier, she would've been alive. The teens begin to experience their natural angst and break the rules, sending all of them deeper into their issues than they think. This is a story of subliminal messaging through the eyes of troubled teens who see each other everyday, be warned and take mental note.
All Rights Reserved
Join the largest storytelling communityGet personalized story recommendations, save your favourites to your library, and comment and vote to grow your community.
Illustration

You may also like

  • Memory of ME
  • Gang Leader's Choice
  • Hopelessly Falling [book 2]
  • The Power Within: A Rose Full Of Emotions (Editing)
  • Camp Where The Hell Are We? | ✓
  • Cynical Souls
  • Revealing silences
  • Broken
  • The Moments I Recall
  • REMINISCENCE

No matter how absurd this story may seem, please remember that it is TRUE. It happened in real life. The fatal accident, not made up; the girl who had to ingratiate others to fit in, not made up; the rich, narcissistic girl who demanded compliment every day, not made up; the hostile girl who suffered through unimaginable pain, not made up. It looks fake, yes, but coincidence did bring these girls together, and Ella Cass, the author, is one of them. Which one of the girls? I'll leave you to guess. A note from Ella Cass: 'If I haven't had that instant where I narrowly avoided death, I would've got buried in the dark until everyone who has ever had any memory of me die off and it would be as if I've never existed. So, this accident, in some way, inspired me to write my experiences down, on the sole purpose of letting my memory live after my death that may occur tomorrow or decades down the road.'

More details
WpActionLinkContent Guidelines