Gerrit AchterbergW
Gerrit Achterberg

Gerrit Achterberg was a Dutch poet. His early poetry concerned a desire to be united with a beloved in death.

H. H. ter BalktW
H. H. ter Balkt

Herman Hendrik ter Balkt was a Dutch poet. He won numerous awards throughout his career, among them the 1988 Jan Campert Prize, the 1998 Constantijn Huygens Prize and the 2003 P. C. Hooft Award. He was born in Usselo, Overijssel and died in Nijmegen.

H. C. ten BergeW
H. C. ten Berge

Johannes Cornelis (Hans) ten Berge is a Dutch poet, prose writer, and translator, who publishes under the name H.C. ten Berge. He has won numerous awards throughout his career, among them the 1996 Constantijn Huygens Prize. He lives in Zutphen.

J. BernlefW
J. Bernlef

Hendrik Jan Marsman, better known by his pen name, J. Bernlef, was a Dutch writer, poet, novelist and translator, much of whose work centres on mental perception of reality and its expression. He won numerous literary awards, including the Constantijn Huygens Prize in 1984 and the P. C. Hooft Award in 1994, both of which were for his work as a whole. His book Hersenschimmen features on the list of NRC's Best Dutch novels.

Maarten BiesheuvelW
Maarten Biesheuvel

Maarten Biesheuvel was a Dutch writer of short stories and novellas. He made his literary debut in 1972 with the short story collection In de bovenkooi. He received the "Ferdinand Bordewijk Prijs" in 1984 for Reis door mijn kamer. In 2007 he received the P. C. Hooft Award.

J. C. BloemW
J. C. Bloem

Jakobus Cornelis (Jacques) Bloem was a Dutch poet and essayist. Between 1921 and 1958 he published fourteen volumes of poetry. In 1949 he won the Constantijn Huygensprijs, one of the country's highest literary awards, and in 1952 the P. C. Hooft Award for his literary oeuvre. In 1965, in rapidly declining health, he was awarded the highest Dutch-language literary award, the Prijs der Nederlandse Letteren. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Ferdinand BordewijkW
Ferdinand Bordewijk

Ferdinand Bordewijk was a Dutch author. His style, which is terse and symbolic, is considered to belong to New Objectivity and magic realism. He was awarded the P. C. Hooftprijs in 1953 and the Constantijn Huygensprijs in 1957. Character (1997), an Academy Award-winning film directed by Mike van Diem, was based on his novel Karakter (1938).

Willem BrakmanW
Willem Brakman

Willem Pieter Jacobus Brakman was a Dutch writer who made his literary debut with the novel Een winterreis in 1961. Brakman received the P. C. Hooft Award in 1980. He was born on June 13th, 1922 in The Hague, Netherlands, and died on May 8th, 2008 in the same country.

Hugo Brandt CorstiusW
Hugo Brandt Corstius

Hugo Brandt Corstius was a Dutch author, known for his achievements in both literature and science.

Remco CampertW
Remco Campert

Remco Campert is a Dutch author, poet and columnist.

Simon CarmiggeltW
Simon Carmiggelt

Simon Carmiggelt was a Dutch writer, journalist, and poet who became a well known public figure in the Netherlands because of his daily newspaper columns and his television appearances.

Eduard Jan DijksterhuisW
Eduard Jan Dijksterhuis

Eduard Jan Dijksterhuis was a Dutch historian of science.

Anton van DuinkerkenW
Anton van Duinkerken

Wilhelmus Johannes Maria Antonius Asselbergs, better known under his pseudonym Anton van Duinkerken, was a Dutch poet, essayist, and academic.

Elisabeth EybersW
Elisabeth Eybers

Elisabeth Françoise Eybers was a South African poet. Her poetry was mainly in Afrikaans, although she has translated some of her own work into English.

Kees FensW
Kees Fens

Kees Fens was a Dutch writer, essayist and literary critic.

Ida GerhardtW
Ida Gerhardt

Ida Gerhardt was a classicist and Dutch poet of a post-symbolist tradition.

Pieter GeylW
Pieter Geyl

Pieter Catharinus Arie Geyl was a Dutch historian, well known for his studies in early modern Dutch history and in historiography.

Hella HaasseW
Hella Haasse

Hélène "Hella" Serafia Haasse was a Dutch writer, often referred to as the "Grande Dame" of Dutch literature, and whose novel Oeroeg (1948) was a staple for generations of Dutch schoolchildren. Her internationally acclaimed magnum opus is Heren van de Thee, translated to The Tea Lords. In 1988 Haasse was chosen to interview the Dutch Queen for her 50th birthday after which celebrated Dutch author Adriaan van Dis called Haasse "the Queen among authors".

Amoene van HaersolteW
Amoene van Haersolte

Jonkvrouw Amoëne van Haersolte was a Dutch author of prose writing.

Bas HeijneW
Bas Heijne

Bastiaan Johan "Bas" Heijne is a Dutch writer and translator.

Willem Frederik HermansW
Willem Frederik Hermans

Willem Frederik Hermans was a Dutch author of poetry, novels, short stories, plays, as well as booklength studies, essays, and literary criticism. His most famous works are The House of Refuge, The Darkroom of Damocles, and Beyond Sleep.

Abel HerzbergW
Abel Herzberg

Abel Jacob Herzberg was a Dutch Jewish lawyer and writer, whose parents were Russian Jews who had come to the Netherlands from Lithuania. Herzberg was trained as a lawyer and began a legal practice in Amsterdam, and became known as a legal scholar also. He was a Zionist from an early age, and around the time of the outbreak of World War II he attempted to emigrate with his family to Palestine. During the war he remained active in Jewish organizations until he was interned, with his wife, in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where his legal background and status as a legal scholar earned him a seat on a prisoners' court. After their captors moved them from Bergen-Belsen, he and his wife were later liberated by the Soviets and made it back to the Netherlands, where they were reunited also with their children. He continued his legal practice in Amsterdam, though he traveled to Palestine and was offered an administrative position in newly-founded Israel.

Judith HerzbergW
Judith Herzberg

Judith Frieda Lina Herzberg is a Dutch poet and writer.

Henk HoflandW
Henk Hofland

Hendrik Johannes Adrianus "Henk" Hofland was a Dutch journalist, commentator, essayist, and columnist. H.J.A. Hofland, as he is also commonly known, is often referred to as the éminence grise of Dutch journalism. In 1999 he was named Dutch "Journalist of the century" in a nationwide poll among his peers. He once described himself as belonging to the "anarcho-liberal community", though his political orientation is that of the secular center of society.

Pierre KempW
Pierre Kemp

Pierre Kemp was a Dutch poet and painter, the recipient of the Constantijn Huygens Prize in 1956 and the P. C. Hooft Award in 1958. His younger brother was the writer Mathias Kemp.

Gerrit KomrijW
Gerrit Komrij

Gerrit Jan Komrij was a Dutch poet, novelist, translator, critic, polemic journalist and playwright. He rose to prominence in the early 1970s writing poetry that sharply contrasted with the free-form poetry of his contemporaries. He acquired a reputation for his prose in the late 1970s, writing acerbic essays and columns often critical of writers, television programs, and politicians. As a literary critic and especially as an anthologist he had a formative influence on Dutch literature: his 1979 anthology of Dutch poetry of the 19th and 20th centuries reformed the canon, and was followed by anthologies of Dutch poetry of the 17th and 18th centuries, of Afrikaans poetry, and of children's poetry. Those anthologies and a steady stream of prose and poetry publications solidified his reputation as one of the country's leading writers and critics; he was awarded the highest literary awards including the P. C. Hooft Award (1993), and from 2000 to 2004 he was the Dutch Dichter des Vaderlands. Komrij died in 2012 at age 68.

Anton KoolhaasW
Anton Koolhaas

Anthonie "Anton" Koolhaas was a Dutch journalist, novelist, and scenario writer.

Rudy KousbroekW
Rudy Kousbroek

Herman Rudolf "Rudy" Kousbroek was a Dutch poet, translator, writer and first of all essayist. He was a prominent figure in Dutch cultural life between 1950 and 2010 and one of the most outspoken atheists in the Netherlands. In 1975 he was awarded the P.C. Hooft Prize for his essays.

Gerrit KouwenaarW
Gerrit Kouwenaar

Gerrit Kouwenaar was a Dutch journalist, translator, poet and prose writer. He was first published in 1941. He was a member of the Dutch poetry group known as the Vijftigers. Kouwenaar worked for magazines and newspapers such as Vrij Nederland, De Waarheid, and Het Vrije Volk. During the mid-1940s, he worked for the illegal newspaper Parade der Profeten. He was arrested for this and sentenced to half a year in jail. Kouwenaar was awarded the Martinus Nijhoff Prize in 1967 for his translation work. In 1970, he was given the P. C. Hooft Award. Kouwenaar later won the 1989 Dutch Literature Prize. In 2009, the Society of Dutch Literature named Kouwenaar the recipient of its annual honor. His last published work was released on 9 August 2008, Kouwenaar's eighty-fifth birthday.

Arthur LehningW
Arthur Lehning

Paul Arthur Müller-Lehning was a Dutch author, historian and anarchist.

LucebertW
Lucebert

Lucebert was a Dutch artist who first became known as the poet of the COBRA movement.

Harry MulischW
Harry Mulisch

Harry Kurt Victor Mulisch was a Dutch writer. He wrote more than eighty novels, plays, essays, poems, and philosophical reflections. Mulisch's works have been translated into over thirty languages.

Charlotte MutsaersW
Charlotte Mutsaers

Charlotte Jacoba Maria Mutsaers is a Dutch painter, prose writer and essayist. She won the Constantijn Huygens Prize (2000) and the P. C. Hooft Award (2010) for her literary oeuvre.

Cees NooteboomW
Cees Nooteboom

Cees Nooteboom is a Dutch novelist, poet and journalist. After the attention received by his novel Rituelen, which received the Pegasus Prize, it was the first of his novels to be translated into an English edition, published in 1983 by Louisiana State University Press of the United States. LSU Press published his first two novels in English in the following years, as well as other works through 1990. Harcourt and Grove Press have since published some of his works in English.

Tonnus OosterhoffW
Tonnus Oosterhoff

Tonnus Oosterhoff is a Dutch poet and writer.

Gerard ReveW
Gerard Reve

Gerard Kornelis Cecil de van het Reve was a Dutch writer. He started writing as Simon Gerard Cecil de van het Reve and adopted the shorter Gerard Reve [ˈɣeːrɑrt ˈreːvə] in 1973. Together with Willem Frederik Hermans and Harry Mulisch, he is considered one of the "Great Three" of Dutch post-war literature. His 1981 novel De vierde man was the basis for Paul Verhoeven's 1983 film.

Karel van het ReveW
Karel van het Reve

Karel van het Reve was a Dutch writer, translator and literary historian, teaching and writing on Russian literature.

Astrid RoemerW
Astrid Roemer

Astrid Heligonda Roemer is a writer and teacher from Suriname living in the Netherlands. The Dutch-language author has published novels, drama and poetry, and in December 2015 was announced as the winner of the P. C. Hooft Award, considered the most important literary prize in the Netherlands and Belgium, which was presented in May 2016.

Adriaan Roland HolstW
Adriaan Roland Holst

Adriaan Roland Holst was a Dutch writer, nicknamed the "Prince of Dutch Poets". He was the second winner, in 1948, of the Constantijn Huygens Prize. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Arthur van SchendelW
Arthur van Schendel

Arthur van Schendel was a Dutch writer of novels and short stories. One of his best known works is Het fregatschip Johanna Maria. His son Arthur F.E. van Schendel (1910–1979) was General Director of the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam from 1959–1975.

K. SchippersW
K. Schippers

K. Schippers is a Dutch poet, prose writer and art critic. He was born in Amsterdam on 6 November 1936. Credited with having introduced the readymade as a poetic form, the whole of his work is dedicated to looking at everyday objects and events in a new way.

Abram de SwaanW
Abram de Swaan

Abram de Swaan is a Dutch essayist, sociologist and professor emeritus from the University of Amsterdam.

M. VasalisW
M. Vasalis

M. Vasalis, pseudonym for Margaretha (Kiekie) Droogleever Fortuyn-Leenmans was a Dutch poet and psychiatrist.

Hans VerhagenW
Hans Verhagen

Hans Verhagen was a Dutch journalist, poet, painter and filmmaker, born in Vlissingen. He gained the P. C. Hooft Award in 2009 "for his humour, his engagement, his poetic daring and whimsy."

Simon VestdijkW
Simon Vestdijk

Simon Vestdijk was a Dutch writer.

Hendrik de VriesW
Hendrik de Vries

Hendrik (Henry) de Vries was a significant Dutch poet and painter. He was an early surrealist, was liberal-minded, and preached vitality. The subconscious mind plays a crucial role in his poetry.

Theun de VriesW
Theun de Vries

Theunis Uilke (Theun) de Vries, was a Dutch writer and poet.

Victor E. van VrieslandW
Victor E. van Vriesland

Victor Emanuel van Vriesland was a Dutch Jewish writer and critic. He studied at the gymnasium in The Hague and then at the University of Dijon.He was literary and artistic journalist, editor of a weekly magazine.He received the Constantijn Huygens Prize in 1958 and the P. C. Hooft Award in 1960. He was the president of the Dutch Pen Club. From 1962 to 1965 van Vriesland was President of PEN International, the worldwide association of writers.Van Vriesland writes as easily in French as in his native language and likes even the refinement of sintaxe and prosody: Te souviendra t-il de mon nom, de ma tendresse? - Le vent qui bat ma fenetre sans cesse L'effacera.

Leo VromanW
Leo Vroman

Leo Vroman was a Dutch-American hematologist, a prolific poet mainly in Dutch and an illustrator.

Jan WolkersW
Jan Wolkers

Jan Hendrik Wolkers was a Dutch author, sculptor and painter.