The fruit of all my grief Lives in the shadows of the American dream

J. Malcolm Garcia, 1957-

Book - 2019

"Award-winning journalist, J. Malcolm Garcia's, essays highlight the struggle, survival, and endurance of average people affected by the injustices of America's remorseless mammoth institutions and public indifference. They include families and small businesses still recovering from the BP Oil Spill; the man sentenced to life in prison for transporting drugs to save his son's life; the widows of soldiers who died, not in war, but from toxic fumes they were exposed to at their bases overseas; the Iraqi interpreter who was promised American asylum, only to arrive and be forced to live in poverty; and the soaring narratives told in The Fruit of All My Grief let us feel the fears, hopes, and outrage of those living in the sh...adows of the 'American Dream'"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Seven Stories Press [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
J. Malcolm Garcia, 1957- (author)
Physical Description
256 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781609809539
  • Sanctuary
  • Fishing with the king
  • The life sentence of Dicky Joe Jackson and his family
  • And the walls came tumbling down
  • Backyard battlefields
  • Nothing went to waste : considering the life of Ben Kennedy
  • What happens after sixteen years in prison
  • A product of this town
  • Smoke signals
  • We are not just refugees
  • New missions.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Studs Terkel Prize--winning journalist Garcia (The Khaarijee) tells 11 stories about people harmed by corporations, judges, and governments, with deep empathy and incredible attention. Jamie and Gladys Scott served 16 years for a robbery they did not commit; Dickie Joe Jackson was incarcerated for life for hauling drugs to raise over $100,000 for his son's medical treatment. Mexican roofer and father Sixto Paz sought sanctuary in a church after Homeland Security refused to renew the work permit he'd had for 25 years. The people of Greenbrier, Ark., find their health affected by fracking but have few economic options other than working for the gas companies. A veteran whose health was destroyed by toxic garbage "burn pits" in Iraq finds the VA is unwilling to take responsibility. Iraqi and Afghan translators residing in the U.S. on special visas because their work for the American military made them unsafe at home must do without practical support from the U.S. government. Garcia respectfully presents the realities his subjects are facing from their own perspectives, and he has a gift for polishing the story of a life until its heart shines through. This humane, urgent work will move readers. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Chronicling "the lives lurking beneath the surface of the everyday."Garcia (Riding Through Katrina With the Red Baron's Ghost: A Memoir of Friendship, Family and a Life Writing Stories, 2018, etc.) demonstrates his strong reporting skills and empathetic writing in this collection of pieces previously published in Guernica, McSweeney's, Oxford American, and the Virginia Quarterly Review, among other publications. The timeliest piece is about the persecution of undocumented immigrants that has ramped up significantly since the election of Donald Trump. In a brief news story, the author learned about Sixto Paz, a Mexican man forestalling deportation by living in a church that "offered sanctuary to undocumented migrants." Garcia traveled to Phoenix to meet Paz in person; as he has done so well in previous books, the author manages to extrapolate from this one individual's story greater truths about a large down-and-out population. Garcia helps readers understand how the daily struggles that define and change his real-life protagonists are relevant to them. At times, the author inserts himself into the narratives, showing readers how his research and reporting affects him. Garcia closes the book with a story on Reynaldo Leal, a U.S. military veteran who completed two tours of duty in Iraq and began to realize, years later, that "most of the country has allowed the war to fade from its consciousness." This piece is another in a long line of the author's impressive stories about military veterans, their traumatic nightmares, and their less-than-adequate treatment by government agencies. Garcia also frequently investigates the broken U.S. criminal justice system, evident here in "What Happens After Sixteen Years in Prison?" The book's subtitle rings true for each piece. One shortcoming: The anthology provides no value-added content, such as contextualizing sections or updates on the stories.Compassionate, memorable tales from a journalist who understands the significance of revealing the inner lives of marginalized individuals. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.