There is a contrast between the horrors Buergenthal recounts and the positive tone of his memoir. He has waited more than 50 years to write A Lucky Child, and it is the detachment of distance, coupled with the author's gracious spirit, that steers the prose away from self-pity or anger ... It is what makes this memoir so rewarding: in the darkness, the indomitable spirit of the child -- Genevieve Fox * Telegraph *
An understated and quietly powerful memoir ... not one to miss -- Libby Purves * Radio 4 Midweek *
Passionate and objective -- Harry McGrath * Sunday Herald *
As understated and optimistic as it is harrowing -- Christopher Hart * Sunday Times *
A tour de force: simply narrated, at times almost naive - and even more shocking as a result -- Camilla Long * Sunday Times News Review *
Thomas Buergenthal is not your average misery memoirist ... What he has to say, both in bearing witness to the Holocaust and in describing his moral coming-to-adulthood, deserves our attention. He has serious things to tell us about forgiveness, justice and the curious effect of deep trauma on the mind ... Buergenthal largely steers away from emotional theatrics ... his is an extraordinary story and he tells it straight ... A quietly courageous undertow to this story is Buergenthal's willingness to look this fact in the face: he doesn't flatter himself he was singled out by God, or destiny, to survive. Only chance separated him from the six million - and accepting that seems to underpin his humane understanding of the world -- Sam Leith * Daily Mail *
Extraordinary and moving ... His memoir is a shining light in the darkness of history ... and a tribute to the irrepressible spirit and optimism of childhood. A book that just has to be read -- Pam Norfolk * Lancashire Evening Post *
In the plainest words and the steadiest tones (as an intimate would speak deadly truth in the dead of night), Thomas Buergenthal delivers to us the child he once was: an unblemished little boy made human prey by Europe's indelible twentieth-century barbarism, a criminality that will never leave off its telling. History and memory fail to ebb; rather, they accelerate and proliferate, and Buergenthals voice is now more thunderous than ever. Pledged to universal human rights, he has turned a life of gratuitous deliverance into a work of visionary compassion. -- Cynthia Ozick
An extraordinary and inspiring book by an extraordinary and inspiring man. It's one of those rare books you devour cover to cover in a single reading. It deserves to be read very widely indeed, especially for anyone desperate for a hint of light in a world that can often seem so very dark. -- Professor Philippe Sands QC
It's a unique, almost magical story - the little boy is like a Kobold or goblin - or some wily younger son in a story by the Brothers Grimm. He survives by a mixture of cunning and sheer dumb luck - he experiences utter horror, but also extraordinary kindness and compassion. This book is also about the getting of wisdom, and young Tommy's determination not to let his dreadful experiences crush his essential humanity. -- Kate Saunders
Wonderful -- Phil Bloomfield * Oxford Times *
A painfully honest work -- Steve Andrew * Morning Star *
Thomas Buergenthal is now a distinguished judge at the International Court in The Hague ... This book tells his remarkable story ... and what the world can learn from this modest, talented and inspiring man. * Good Book Guide *
A deeply moving story ... a vivid juxtaposition of matter-of-fact details of the life of a young child and the ultimate horror of a death camp. -- Juliet Gardiner * History Today *