When Thomas Pak is hired as a clerk at a Korean grocery, he isn't
prepared for the searing racial tensions that threaten to destroy the
neighborhood in which he lives and works. His tenuous relationship with
the store owners and their young daughter is jeopardized by his own
conflicting affiliations of race and class, and these turbulent forces
soon converge violently around in the form of a race riot. Thomas
Keneally (Schindler's List) wrote of this book: Leonard Chang's vigorous
tale is a drama of society's perpetual struggle for renewal and
reconciliation. It is an elegant story of the zone of conflict between
African and Asian Americans and, in the central character, the poignancy
and contradictions of tribalism and fraternity are vividly proved.
Library Journal: Chang's gift for unsentimental storytelling is
indisputable. The Pacific Reader: The Fruit 'N Food is a thoroughly
enjoyable, wonderfully written, socially relevant piece of contemporary
fiction. Chang writes with simple elegance that immediately draws the
reader in.