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Book Cover for: Children of Radium: A Buried Inheritance, Joe Dunthorne

Children of Radium: A Buried Inheritance

Joe Dunthorne

Critic Reviews

Good

Based on 12 reviews on

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*A New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice Pick*

In the tradition of When Time Stopped and The Hare with Amber Eyes, this "profound...comic...[and] unconventional" (The New York Times) family memoir investigates the dark legacy of the author's great-grandfather, a talented German-Jewish chemist who wound up developing chemical weapons and gas mask filters for the Nazis.

When Joe Dunthorne began researching his family history, he expected to write the account of their harrowing escape from Nazi Germany in 1935. What he found in his great-grandfather Siegfried's voluminous, unpublished, partially translated memoir was a much darker, more complicated story.

Siegfried was an eccentric Jewish scientist living in a small town north of Berlin, where he began by developing a radioactive toothpaste before moving on to products with a more sinister military connection--first he made and tested gas-mask filters, and then he was invited to establish a chemical weapons laboratory. By 1933, he was the laboratory's director, helping the Nazis to "improve" their poisons and prepare for large-scale production. "I confess to my descendants who will read these lines that I made a grave error," he wrote. "I cannot shake off the great debt on my conscience."

Armed only with his great-grandfather's rambling, nearly two-thousand-page deathbed memoir and a handful of archival clues, Dunthorne traveled to Munich, Ammendorf, Berlin, Ankara, and Oranienburg--a place where hundreds of unexploded bombs remain hidden in the irradiated soil--to uncover the sprawling, unsettling legacy of Siegfried's work. Seeking to understand one "jolly grandpa" with a patchy psychiatric history, Dunthorne confronts the uncomfortable questions that lie at the heart of every family: Can we ever understand our origins? Is every family story a work of fiction? And if the truth can be found, will we be able to live with it?

Children of Radium is a witty and wry, deeply humane and endlessly surprising meditation on individual and collective inheritance that considers the long half-life of trauma, the weight of guilt, and the ever-evasive nature of the truth.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Scribner Book Company
  • Publish Date: Apr 1st, 2025
  • Pages: 240
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.50in - 5.60in - 1.00in - 0.70lb
  • EAN: 9781982180751
  • Categories: Modern - 20th Century - HolocaustMemoirsFamily History & Genealogy (See Also Reference - Genealogy &

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About the Author

Dunthorne, Joe: - Joe Dunthorne is the author of Children of Radium, The Adulterants, O Positive: Poems, Wild Abandon, and Submarine, which was translated into fifteen languages and made into an award-winning film. His work has been published in The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, London Review of Books, The Paris Review, McSweeney's, Granta, The Guardian, and The Atlantic. He was born in Wales and lives in London.

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Book Cover for: The Adulterants, Joe Dunthorne

Critics’ reviews

Praise for this book

"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