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Breena Clarke's first novel takes place in Georgetown in 1925, where a large and
close-knit African American community took shape beneath the shadow of
segregation. At the center of the story is baby Clara, who is swallowed by the
Potomac as her sister, Johnnie Mae, cools off in the brackish water. It's the
only place the girls can find relief--they're banned from the new, clean
swimming pool the white kids use.
After Clara drowns, the river is never the same, and Johnnie Mae hovers on
the edge of womanhood wondering if she'll be able to get past her guilt and
emptiness. In an eloquent passage, Clarke writes, "Losing a loved one, a family
member, is like losing a tooth. After a while, those teeth remaining shift and
lean and spread out to split the distance between themselves and the other teeth
still left, trying to close up spaces."
Bits of wisdom like this are the book's charm. Most remarkable are the church
scenes, which Clarke renders almost purely in the give-and-take of voices: the
booming preacher's sermon ("The people we love, we only borrowing them"), and
the congregation's "Praise Jesus, Amen" exclamations. The author based her novel
on stories passed down in Georgetown--tales of that area's first black churches,
founded when people decided they wanted their own place of worship, and
implicitly their own God. In church the novel takes flight. Elsewhere River,
Cross My Heart suffers from clumsy, purple prose, and a plot that moves
forward in labored fits and starts. Clarke painstakingly tries to re-create this
past world, but sometimes it seems her duty to history is holding her back,
bogging her down in period-piece details. In the effortless church scenes,
history loses its gravity and is absorbed by grace. --Emily White
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