October 8th, 2008
Sarah Vowell. The Wordy Shipmates. | Of buckles and corn and hacked-off body parts.0 comments
September 24th, 2008
McCain’s Promise. David Foster Wallace | Saying farewell to ideals.1 comment
September 24th, 2008
Stephen Baker. The Numerati | Smile, you’re on PC.0 comments
September 17th, 2008
Chuck Klosterman. Downtown Owl | Gonna die in this small town/ And that’s probably where they’ll bury me. 0 comments
September 17th, 2008
Paul Auster. Man in the Dark | Paul Auster builds an elaborate fantasy to reflect on real-life loss.0 comments
September 3rd, 2008
Nena Baker. The Body Toxic | A thin new book builds a thin, old case against the chemical industry.2 comments
August 20th, 2008
You Don’t Know Me1 comment
August 13th, 2008
Pharmakon1 comment
July 30th, 2008
Zak Sally, At The Pony Club | When Mickey started drinking, that’s when things got interesting.0 comments
July 23rd, 2008
Writer’s Edge Faculty Reading | The collective literary fringe new and now.0 comments
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[May 21st, 2008]
Adam Leith Gollner’s first book, The Fruit Hunters: A Story of Nature, Adventure, Commerce, and Obsession (Scribner, 272 pages, $25), reads like a travel guide through a Technicolor universe of exotic fruits; it’s ripe with sensual descriptions and inundated with enough botanical trivia to overwhelm anyone, religious “fruitarian” or not. From Brazil and Montreal to Florida, Cameroon and Borneo, Gollner sniffs out nature’s most bizarre fruits, trekking through jungles and street markets—and braving airport security—to explore his obsession because, as he writes: “[Fruits] represent everything that’s wonderful in the world.”
The Fruit Hunters gushes with prose that revels in the underworld of fruit smuggling, trading, selling, buying and grafting to uncover an entire subculture intoxicated with biophilia (love of life). Gollner, a seasoned journalist, delights in his promise that eating fruit is “tasting forgotten histories.” He traces the life of fruits, both forbidden and common, and reports on the state of business and politics of fruit and the people whose lives depend on them, like Gary Snyder, the inventor of the grape-apple hybrid “Grapple.”
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On one of his expeditions, Gollner finds the Miracle Fruit, whose juices turn sour into sweet, and flesh that tastes like “chocolate-cardamom pellets dipped in clove-infused rose water.” He devotes 23 pages to the durian, a spiky fruit that contains 43 different sulfur compounds and smells like rotting fish. He mentions the milk orange, swan-egg pears, the Oaxacan “tree of little skulls,” bastard cherries, Congo goobers, bignays, fruits of the toad tree, and the mysterious coco de mer, which contains the largest seed in the world (weighing up to 45 pounds) and resembles the female reproductive region.
But the author’s love for his subject is also, at times, his downfall. While filled with surprising facts and evocative prosody, The Fruit Hunters lacks a focused narrative drive. Gollner fills his chapters with countless lists of facts and historical anecdotes about the evolutions of fruits most of us have never heard of, but in places the book reads like a lyric field report. Regardless, this whirlwind food tour will tempt anyone with a sweet (or sour) tooth from first page to last.
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Adam Leith Gollner, The Fruit Hunters”
Fun to read. The travels sound almost as inviting as the fruits themselves. Who knew there were so many facets to fruit?








