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Children of Radium: A Buried Inheritance

Mem­oirs writ­ten by poets and nov­el­ists often have a spe­cial charm to them, even when they deal with dif­fi­cult and painful sub­jects, and Joe Dunthorne’s book, based on his family’s his­to­ry, takes this a step fur­ther, infus­ing ener­gy and inten­si­ty into the nar­ra­tive and bring­ing the read­er direct­ly into his remark­able adventure ... Dunthorne’s sen­si­tive han­dling of this lega­cy of guilt brings us a sear­ing­ly hon­est look inside the minds and hearts of a fam­i­ly with the dark, painful secret of collaboration ... Meticulous prose.
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Discursive ... The book’s circuitous, meandering structure...tests the reader’s patience. Epiphanies are sandwiched between near-irrelevancies and reportorial dead ends ... The memoirist wrestles with both his great-grandfather’s complicity and his family’s continuing ties to Germany.
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He brings a novelist’s eye for detail, character and witty observation to Children of Radium ... The shocking facts he uncovers are not revealed in chronological order (which may have been a little easier for the reader) but in the order Dunthorne discovers them, so limber up for a bit of jumping between timelines ... I started to flag in the later chapters recounting Siegfried’s later life in America ... More about the author’s journey towards accepting the actions of his ancestors than it is about those ancestors. Dunthorne’s dry wit means these elements are still enjoyable but I preferred the sections where he has enough information to bring the world of Siegfried and his family to life.
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