I was reading through the Wikipedia entry on the Kuomintang and was surprised that they were anti-imperialist and fairly anti-capitalist, at least back in the day. There is a part there that says the Marxist in the KMT thought that China had already passed through it's feudal stage and was in a stagnant capitalist stage. My impression was that the KMT were essentially like the nationalist in German, Japan, or modern USA (they very well may have been, I suppose). I was also a little surprised that the USSR backed the KMT over the CPC too.
So really what was the beef between the two on an ideological basis?
EDIT: Sun Yat-sen is also interesting to read about. The megathread, that I somehow missed reading four months ago, was an interesting review.
Having read both I'd say (imho) if you could only read one for whatever reason before you kicked the bucket 100% read Fanon, however, Sakai is a lot less academic jargony which may make his work more accessible to some, but he is no where near in depth as Fanon.