““…a memorable addition to the genre of memoirs by those who survived the Holocaust… It is a mark of his brilliance as a memoirist that the truth of the child who lived these things and the truth of the adult who recounts them in old age illuminate one another: the subject is grim, but the book itself makes for warm and thought-provoking reading.” • TLS“Tony Molho’s Courage and Compassion is a brilliant memoir about the Shoah in Greece, its aftermath, and the author’s family’s attempt to continue creating and moving forward despite their tragedy.” • The Markaz Review“The way in which Anthony Molho accepts…[the] obligation to establish his identity retains all the noble elements that characterize his narrative: the orientation of his conscience towards what unites and not what divides people, towards the virtue that prefers cheerful conciliation to grim denunciation.” • The Books’ Journal“This great ‘little book’ as the author repeatedly and humbly describes it, was written following decades of reflection, and is presented in "layers of memory" as with remarkable agility Molho shifts the reader’s attention from one period to another. A novelistic narrative of rare emotion, subtlety and sensitivity and a treasure trove of memories and self-awareness…” • Kathimerini“Many Holocaust memoirs have been published, but Greece has been noticeably absent from this literature, and the story told here is little known. Of all the Holocaust literature, no work combines the literary quality and child’s-eye view found in Molho’s engrossing story.” • David I. Kertzer, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Pope and Mussolini“… [T]he deeply moving nature of this memoir derives from its emphatic demonstration that, for Tony (as perhaps indeed for all survivors of the Shoah), there was and has been no “other story.” Far from the “before” and “after” being different tales, far from the “after” being “another story,” this beautiful memoir shows us the powerful ways in which our childhood core is what we carry with us over the arc of a lifetime.” • Katherine Fleming, President, J. Paul Getty Trust"Chronicle? Memoir? History? However, one tries to describe Antony Molho's book, I don’t believe that it will do it justice. Molho, a great historian, plays with all the possibilities offered by writing to give us a narrative that is extremely fascinating, as well as instructive about the relationships between memory and history. And especially about what it meant to be a Jewish child in Thessaloniki in the 1940s." • Kostas Kostis, University of Athens