Kinder navigates themes of love, loss, and the human condition in this coming of age novel, which impresses me as autobiography. It's a blend of humor and touching moments. Speer, the main character, lives in the small town of Century, West Virginia. A cousin of his, Herk, is a bully and beats up Speer on a regular basis. His mother is divorced, and sister Cynthia is often ailing. Speer is close to his older cousin, Catherine, an intellectual who reads a lot and writes a novel. No publishing houses pick it up, however. She drinks a lot and gets tipsy from couch syrup. This experimental novel has an odd structure. Told in the first person, sometimes in the present tense, other times in the past. And it jumps around in time. Also the plot is broken up by musings on tribal people, like the Maori, the Cherokees and Australian indigenous folks. In some respects, the story is about story construction itself. In any event, the prose is poetic and will resonate with readers. Kinder explores the message of the search for identity in this work on a boy in Appalachia.