
Children of Radium
A Buried Inheritance
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Narrated by:
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Joe Dunthorne
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By:
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Joe Dunthorne
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
Off-beat, irreverent and subversive – a Jewish family memoir about convenient delusions and unsayable truths, from the acclaimed author of the cult classic novel, Submarine
Joe Dunthorne had always wanted to write about his great-grandfather, Siegfried: an eccentric scientist who invented radioactive toothpaste and a Jewish refugee from the Nazis who returned to Germany under cover of the Berlin Olympics to pull off a heist on his own home.
The only problem was that Siegfried had already written the book of his life – an unpublished, two-thousand page memoir so dry and rambling that none of his living descendants had managed to read it. And, as it turned out when Joe finally read the manuscript himself, it told a very different story from the one he thought he knew…
Thus begins a mystery which stretches across the twentieth century and around the world, from Berlin to Ankara, New York, Glasgow and eventually London – a mystery about the production of something much more sinister than toothpaste. On the trail of one ‘jolly grandpa’ with a patchy psychiatric history and an encyclopaedic knowledge of poison gases, Joe Dunthorne is forced to confront the uncomfortable questions that lie at the heart of every family. Can we ever understand where we come from? Is every family in the end a work of fiction? And even if the truth can be found – will we be able to live with it?
Children of Radium is a remarkable, searching meditation on individual and collective inheritance. Witty and wry, deeply humane and endlessly surprising, it considers the long half-life of trauma, the weight of guilt and the ever-evasive nature of the truth.
'A gripping story of family secrets and chemical warfare [and] a tale of one writer’s search for a reliable past... Joe Dunthorne has written a contemporary classic' Andrew O'Hagan
Critic reviews
What listeners say about Children of Radium
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- Stephen Bentley
- 07-04-25
Deeply Moving.
Difficult to go into great detail without doing a spoiler alert. My heart sank to my boots on discovering that the Author was doing the reading, but it went very well. The story would not have come across so well with an Actors flourish. Without giving too much away, I suspect there might be other, similar, tales from the nightmare of WW2 and Ghettos and Camps. Glad I'm not God.
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- Lynne Suo
- 08-04-25
Extremely moving in it’s honesty.
Caring, methodical, brilliant, heart searing memoir. One of the year’s best. Highly recommended historical examination.
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