Chattanooga Times Free Press

A memoir of an Indiana childhood and the murderer next door

- BY MARION WINIK

“Riverine: A Memoir from Anywhere But Here” by Angela Palm; Graywolf Press. 253 pages. $16.

The dictionary defines “riverine” as “formed by or resembling a river.” Both senses apply to Angela Palm’s debut memoir. The author revisits a childhood spent alongside and knee-deep in the Kankakee River in Indiana. Rerouted to make space for the town she grew up in, the waterway flooded every few years, reclaiming its original route. “But why?” she wonders. “Why had anyone built a whole neighborho­od in an old riverbed that flooded half the time and stunk like rot and heat all the time?”

The story resembles a river, too: the proverbial stream of consciousn­ess, a meandering journey through Palm’s inner life. As the author comments to Corey, the man she loved when she was a girl and he was the boy next door, “People are mostly water and thoughts.”

Fortunatel­y, most of thoughts in this book are like that one: well-put, often worth stopping and mulling over. But what keeps the pages turning is the current of Angela and Corey’s doomed relationsh­ip. By the time she is old enough to do more than stare at him out the window, he has murdered an elderly neighbor couple in cold blood and is serving a life sentence without parole. He can never be her boyfriend, but he is never far from her mind. Eventually she begins to write to him, and in the final section of the book, to visit him in prison.

Angela and Corey’s hometown was featured in “The Guinness Book of World Records” for having the most churches per capita. This and many other dusty clichés about flyover country get a vigorous beating and airing here, returning to their original brightness. Cornfields, for example, may look “unassuming and picturesqu­e from a distance,” but they are a “rural hell” to a young teen working as a corn detasseler. ” close, this close, the corn was violent with leaves as thick and sharp as thorns that cut right through skin.” This job is done by local kids too young for regular work permits alongside teams of migrant workers. Never are the two permitted to mingle. The kids, Palm suspects, are paid more.

As soon as she’s old enough, Palm gets a job at the River, the town’s only bar and restaurant, another cliché setting brought stinking and rocking to life. “At work, I kept waitresses from crying or fighting, inhaled secondhand smoke, and smelled like meat juice.” On breaks she drinks virgin daiquiris, reads, and dreams of Corey, already in prison. “Corey had worked there and planted the plants around the restaurant. … He had washed the dishes that I would clear from the tables. I liked this continuity.”

From the first pages to the last, “Riverine” is full of questions. One of these is the purpose of writing.

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