“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 ... 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.”
– Publishers Weekly
“Garcia demonstrates his strong reporting skills and empathetic writing in this collection ... Compassionate, memorable tales from a journalist who understands the significance of revealing the inner lives of marginalized individuals.”
– Kirkus Reviews
“I’ve used essays from The Fruit of All My Grief as required reading in my narrative long-form writing class. I urge students to do what J. Malcolm Garcia does here so brilliantly: he listens to the voices of real people and then he channels their collective hopes and desires, their struggle against what John Steinbeck called the 'marching phalanx' arrayed against them. Others write about Wall Street. Then there’s Malcolm’s Street—the back alleys and shuttered storefronts of the inner city, the suburbs with their hidden desperation, the forgotten rural towns. In other words, the 99 percent of America.”
– Dale Maharidge, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of And Their Children After Them
“[T]here’s a writer named J. Malcolm Garcia who continually astounds me with his energy and empathy. He writes powerful and lyrical nonfiction from Afghanistan, from Buenos Aires, from Mississippi, all of it urgent and provocative. I’ve been following him wherever he goes.”
– Dave Eggers
“A deftly crafted, inherently engaging, and often riveting read, The Fruit of All My Grief: Lives in the Shadows of the American Dream is an extraordinary study that is unreservedly recommended for community, college, and university library contemporary social Issues collections and supplemental curriculum studies lists.”
– Able Greenspan, Midwest Book Review