Prøve GULL - Gratis

Half-life

New Zealand Listener

|

June 28-July 4, 2025

British writer’s relentless search to find the toxic truth behind his German-Jewish family’s WWII survival.

- CHERYL PEARL SUCHER

Half-life

Irony and deadpan humour have defined Jewish storytelling for millennia. And it is with dry alacrity that Joe Dunthorne, the Welsh novelist and poet renowned for his hilarious yet anguished coming-of-age novel Submarine, tells the astonishing saga of his quest to discover the buried war history of his family, specifically that of his great-grandfather Siegfried Merzbacher.

Merzbacher was a German-Jewish chemist living in Oranienburg, a small town north of Berlin, where he developed various radioactive household items, including a dentifrice called Doramad. Due to its wildly popular success, Merzbacher was promoted by his respected German employer to develop new gas mask filters, as well as a chemical weapon laboratory.

“My grandmother grew up brushing her teeth with radioactive toothpaste,” Dunthorne begins. “The active ingredient was irradiated calcium carbonate and her father was the chemist in charge of making it... it promised gums ‘charged with new life energy’ anda ‘blindingly white smile’.” Doramad became the preferred toothpaste of the German Army.

The cover of Children of Radium features a photograph of children playing ring-a-ring-o'-roses while wearing gas masks. The shot was discovered in an edition of the popular magazine Die Gasmaske, which often included evidence of Dunthorne’s great-grandfather’s discoveries.

Forced to leave Berlin in 1935 because they were Jews, the Merzbacher family took “tubes of itwith them, their suitcases gently emitting alpha particles as they travelled a thousand miles east”.

Like the radioactive ions slowly leaking poison into the Merzbacher's possessions, a sinister undercurrent gradually poisons Dunthorne's heroic imagining of his family’s escape from Nazi Germany.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Driven to distraction

The car door closes with the gentlest of clicks, the vacuum-like silence entombing them a welcome relief from the relentless roar of the wind outside.

time to read

5 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Hatches and despatches

Commentary - The Good Life

time to read

3 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Best local laughs

Unforgettable sitcoms on the telly.

time to read

1 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

The wives of Tamanuitera

Ma lives in Raumati, a 45-minute drive from the city.

time to read

6 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Racing a deadline

A transition plan for the end to greyhound racing in New Zealand has yet to emerge, raising fears for the future of the dogs.

time to read

8 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

A spinning world

Watching icebergs can not only send imaginations off on tangents, it once set in motion a whole new science.

time to read

5 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Best on telly

From sweeping epics to domestic nightmares, the year in television didn't lack for big ideas or ways to rattle viewer expectations. Here, RUSSELL BAILLIE and RUSSELL BROWN offer their picks for the top 10 dramas, along with the best in local comedy and documentaries.

time to read

5 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Best of the big screen

Listener film reviewers SARAH WATT and RUSSELL BAILLIE name their top 10 of the year, with a guide to where you can find them.

time to read

4 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

ADORABLE BIG FRUIT LOOP

Auckland author and Listener contributor Nicky Pellegrino on her rescue greyhound, Harry.

time to read

3 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Up onto the roof and down again

Each summer, we commission nine of Aotearoa’s finest writers to tell us a short tale. This year’s theme is distraction. Here are the first three.

time to read

5 mins

December 27 2025 - January 9 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size