
Title: The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store
Author: James McBride
Publisher: Riverhead Books
Publication date: August 8, 2023
Length: 385 pages
Genre: Historical fiction
Source: Purchased
Rating: n/a
The new novel from the bestselling, National Book Award-winning, Oprah Book Club-picked, Barack Obama favourite James McBride.
In 1972, when workers in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, were digging the foundations for a new development, the last thing they expected to find was a skeleton at the bottom of a well. Who the skeleton was and how it got there were two of the long-held secrets kept by the residents of Chicken Hill, the dilapidated neighbourhood where immigrant Jews and African Americans lived side by side and shared ambitions and sorrows.
As these characters’ stories overlap and deepen, it becomes clear how much the people who live on the margins struggle and what they must do to survive. When the truth is finally revealed about what happened on Chicken Hill and the part the town’s white establishment played in it, McBride shows us that even in dark times, it is love and community-heaven and earth-that sustain us.
I was tempted to skip writing a review of The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store, because I simply didn’t know quite how to summarize my reading experience.
In terms of artistry, it’s an impressive achievement. Probaby 4 – 5 stars. And yet, I didn’t actually enjoy the process of reading this book all that much… so 3 stars? Rather than attach a number, I’ll just share a few thoughts, and leave it at that.
Let me start by saying that “literary fiction” isn’t especially my jam, precisely because of the sort of dilemma I’m having here. I can appreciate beautiful use of language and original, artistic storytelling — but if the plot doesn’t pull me in and make me hate to put the book down, it’s just not going to be all that fun for me.
For The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store, I was intrigued by what I’d heard even before picking up the book. In brief, the book tells the story of the poor neighborhood of Chicken Hill in Pottstown, Pennsylvania. In the 1930s, Chicken Hill is where the Jewish and Black communities find a home, since the white, Protestant residents of Pottstown — including the town doctor, who dons a hood and marches with the KKK each year — don’t want them polluting the nicer areas of their town.
Here in Chicken Hill, there are jazz theaters and speakeasies, a synagogue and mikveh, and the Heaven & Earth Grocery Store, run by Chona, the daughter of the man who first built the store, who was also the local rabbi. Chona’s husband Moshe runs the theater and is madly in love with Chona. Chona has a beautiful heart and welcomes the entire neighborhood to her store, where she isn’t particularly picky about who can pay and who can’t — she makes sure people have enough to eat, and sends the children on their way feeling cared for and loved.
The book opens in 1972, when a body is found in a well. We then go back 50 years to the main story of the book, which is essentially a profile of the lives of Chicken Hill’s families, showing their connections, stories, conflicts, and secrets, building up by the end to the revelation of the truth about that body.
The resolution of the mystery isn’t what drives the book, though. Instead, the book weaves in and out of people’s lives, showing their relationships, their differences, and how the people of the different communities within Chicken Hill hold themselves separate yet also come together in a crisis.
The storytelling meanders quite a bit, especially for the first third or so of the book, as we get to know the essence of the neighborhood and its people. This is probably why I didn’t have a great time reading this book — I wanted a bit more forward motion, and that’s hard to come by until later in the book.
Ultimately, the intricate interconnections between the various characters, as well as their backstories and hidden motivations, make this book a literary achievement. While the style wasn’t what I typically enjoy, I still appreciated the historical elements, the sprawling cast of characters, and the depiction of a memorable time and place.

This is just one reader’s response! The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store is listed on a huge number of notable and “best of” lists for 2023, and I recommend looking into it further if you think this might be a book for you.
To read more about The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store:
New York Times review
NPR review
Washington Post review
The Guardian review
I appreciate your thoughts. I really struggled with this! Too many characters and meanderings. I actually DNFed at 87% (!!!) because of the child abuse. So after all that I don’t know how it ends!
I can see why you’d DNF! Believe, there were a couple of times I was tempted (and I agree, there were some horrifying scenes that made me very unhappy).
I wish more content warnings had been cited for this one.
I used to really enjoy reading literary fiction when I was in my 20s, but now I’m older and I just want a good story with characters I can like. Wishing you a very Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year, too. 😀
Thanks, Lark — Merry Christmas to you and your loved ones! I think my preferences have changed over time as well, and literary fiction generally isn’t going to appeal to me at this point.
So… Writer UnBoxed has this thing called “Flog a Pro: Would You Turn the First Page of this Bestseller?” where they give you the opening of an unnamed book by an unnamed author, and you have to decide if you’ll read on. This was the last one they featured, and my answer was a resounding NO! OMG… this guy did absolutely NO research about Jews or Jewish traditions or Judaism, and that whole opening was ALL WRONG! (For example, how could someone hit their head on a mezuzah? That’s physically impossible, if you know where and how a mezuzah must be affixed.)
Ohhh, well, the character is actually responding that he “bangs his head against it sometimes” in response to being asked if he speaks Hebrew! But now I’m super curious about “flog a pro” — it’s a great concept!
Ah… still… how does the cop know what the inscription says, if it is in Hebrew? Wait, maybe the “old Jew” said that? SO confusing without quotation marks. And again, inscriptions on a mezuzah just aren’t done.
Yeah… it does end up making sense (more or less) in the context, but your points are fair.
Oh, as for the Flog a Pro… if you sign up for the Writer Unboxed newsletters, they appear every so often. The site is here https://writerunboxed.com/ They also have articles by authors that can be very interesting, if you’re into writing as well as reading.
Thanks!
His mother is Jewish (she fled pogroms in Poland and came to the US at 17) and he grew up going to Jewish schools in NYC. I think you may have misinterpreted the passage. He wrote a whole book about and in homage to his Jewish mother called the Color of Water which is another beautifully written book.