`My book of the year is the volume of essays, THE MEMORY CHALET, many of which were written as he was dying of motor neurone disease and were published originally in The New York Review of Books. Judt was one of the finest historians of the past half-century and a brilliant memoirist and essayist.' --Chris Patten, Financial Times, Books of the Year
`Tony Judt, had a wonderful prose style, and his little book THE MEMORY CHALET, a collection of autobiographical essays, is beautiful and moving. Although Judt, who suffered from motor neurone disease, died earlier this year, this late work is more sustaining than sad.' --John Banville, Guardian, Books of the Year
`I've been deeply moved by Tony Judt's reminiscence-in-essays.' --Claire Messud, Daily Telegraph, Books of the Year
`Faced with the prospect of death [Tony Judt has] produced a great testament of faith and humanity ... Tony Judt's dying words in THE MEMORY CHALET makes the connection between memory and society.' --Fintan O'Toole, Observer, Books of the Year
`The brilliant historian Tony Judt's posthumously published biographical essays, THE MEMORY CHALET show what a learned, witty, subtle, and above all, civilised man we have lost.' --Evening Standard, Books of the Year
`It is pleasant, if bittersweet, to salute a life-affirming piece of reminiscence and micro-history like Tony Judt's THE MEMORY CHALET. Judt's death, aged only 62, was perhaps the saddest of all the too-numerous losses the historical profession had to mark during 2010.' --Stephen Howe, Independent, Books of the Year
`A book to treasure ... The chambers of his memory chalet will live on long after him: witty, profound, controversial ... for they tell you, more clearly than any work of imagination, what the last few months of life are like. In a sense, you learn how to die yourself ... Wonderfully written ... He has the natural essayist's ability to riff on a diverting theme ... Through these pages, he emerges as a wellspring of enlightenment you need to spend time with ... A slim volume that oscillates constantly between brilliance and exasperation and love. He has the eye for detail of a historian, and the empathy of a human being ... Will move, educate and perhaps inspire for many years. This chalet is built of stone, on the firmest foundations.' --Peter Preston, Observer
`A tremendously moving memorial to a first-class historian and essayist, moving from the streets of London in the threadbare Clement Attlee years to the dining rooms of New York in the 21st century. If nothing else, Judt led a compellingly colour life ... Some of the most affecting passages in this book look back to Judt's childhood, long before his academic fame and fortune. He writes beautifully about the moral and physical atmosphere of his London boyhood...This book is quintessential Judt: humane, fearless, unsparingly honest. In essay after essay the same qualities shine forth, all the more remarkable given the tragic circumstances ... That he finished with such a wonderfully moving book is a mark of the man.' --Financial Times
`Anyone who wants to begin learning about what is going on in the Middle East or why Marxism failed could do a lot worse than start here. Yet there is a lot more to THE MEMORY CHALET than the political history that made Judt's name. His recollections of riding on London's Green Line buses in the late Fifties, for instance, is as concretely evocative of Proust ... Who could have imagine that a virtually paraplegic man, rendered sleepless by the itches and sores his disease ensured he couldn't scratch or soothe, could compose so lucidly and elegantly inside his head and dictate it all perfectly the next morning?...[A] heartbreaking book.' --Daily Express
`One of our most brilliant and fearless public intellectuals ... In thus explaining his life, this book becomes a rallying cry against a narrow politics of identity, whether practised by the Left, by some American Jews and other groups flaunting what he calls a "boastful victimhood", or by the nationalistic, anti-immigration Right ... Luminous, witty, moving, never less than unflinchingly honest.' --Evening Standard
`The pieces in THE MEMORY CHALET, dictated to friends, represent his attempt "to turn to advantage the increasingly internal reference of my own thoughts" and to give permanence to "the little histories that take shape in my head as I lie sheathed in nocturnal gloom". They deftly combine the memories of an autobiographer with the kind of social analysis that Judt the historian cannot resist ... In his final months, in the grip of neurological disorder, words began to fail Judt for the first time in his life. Readers should rejoice that he was able to make sure these touching and insightful essays were recorded before they left him completely.' --Sunday Times
`In examining his past, Judt has managed to write what amounts to a Bildungsroman of one of the most distinctive writerly personas of the age. At the same time, he has told us something important about ourselves: about what we were and what we have become.' --Jonathan Derbyshire, New Statesman