"A brave and beautiful memoir, Joe Dunthorne's incisive exploration of his family history unearths stunning discoveries and takes the reader on a remarkable adventure that spans countries and resonates across generations. I have read many memoirs of the war and have never encountered anything like this. Lyrical but unflinching, this is an extraordinary book." --Ariana Neumann, New York Times bestselling author of When Time Stopped
"Joe Dunthorne has a beautiful, wry, elliptical style, and he deploys it to hair-raising effect in Children of Radium. A gripping story of family secrets and chemical warfare, it is also a tale of one writer's search for a reliable past. Deep in these pages you discover a travelogue of lucid suspicions, brilliantly pursued, where historical truths are finally brought into the light. The first-rate poet and novelist is ever-present, bringing images and psychic dimensions to the book that are simply unforgettable. Dunthorne has written a contemporary classic." --Andrew O'Hagan, author of Caledonian Road
"Children of Radium is a moving, funny, disturbing, and deeply surprising book, an action-packed meditation and a moral adventure story, full of the kinds of intimate and historical contradictions we all live with in one way or another. Like Primo Levi's 'Gray Zone, ' the territory this book explores is defined by its ambiguity and complexity, and we are lucky to have a writer of Dunthorne's enormous gifts to lead us on the trail." --Sam Lipsyte, author of The Ask and No One Left to Come Looking for You
"The best book I've read in the past year. . . . Dunthorne brings distinction and finesse to every sentence, such as when he speaks of the old man's depression, 'washing dishes as if trying to drown them.' A masterpiece." --Andrew O'Hagan, Financial Times
"An extraordinary and unexpected journey; one finely and gently crafted." --Philippe Sands, author of The Ratline: The Exalted Life and Mysterious Death of a Nazi Fugitive
"Children of Radium is an investigative memoir like no other. Written with such clear-eyed intelligence, it's by turns wryly entertaining, morally complex and, ultimately, profoundly moving. It's a remarkable achievement from a writer who is consistently at the top of his game." --Nathan Filer, author of The Shock of the Fall and The Heartland
"A deft, brilliant, deceptive book, somehow both devastating and hilarious. Dunthorne's family story is the best kind: both personal and universal, told with the darkest comedy and deep humanity. It is also a version of history at its most slippery, shaped by the flawed memories of the people we love and our own wayward attempts to make sense of them." --Sophie Elmhirst, author A Marriage at Sea