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Stefan Hertmans

    31 de marzo de 1951

    Stefan Hertmans es un autor, poeta y ensayista flamenco cuya extensa obra literaria abarca poesía, novelas, ensayos y cuentos. Su trabajo profundiza en temas humanos trascendentales, a menudo recurriendo a archivos personales e historia, y se distingue por su lenguaje poético y sus perspicaces reflexiones. Hertmans explora las complejidades de la memoria humana, el impacto de la historia en los individuos y la naturaleza de la identidad. Su estilo único y su meticuloso examen del pasado resuenan con lectores de todo el mundo, lo que le ha valido el reconocimiento internacional.

    Stefan Hertmans
    De opgang
    The Great Swindle
    Intercities
    The Convert
    War and turpentine
    The Ascent
    • Dius

      Roman

      "Wanneer student Dius bij zijn docent Anton aanbelt en hem zijn onvoorwaardelijke vriendschap aanbiedt, begint alles in hun beide levens te schuiven. Wat hen bindt is hun verlangen om in een andere tijd te leven – de ruimte van de polders, de sublieme schilderkunst, de schoonheid die verloren gaat. En die alsnog, weliswaar te laat, een van hen wereldberoemd zal maken, ondanks de zware littekens die het leven hun toebrengt. Met Dius vertelt Stefan Hertmans het onweerstaanbare levensverhaal van een onmodieuze kunstenaarsziel, in de grote traditie van de oude schildersbiografieën."--

      Dius2024
    • Die Suche nach der Gegenwart

      Essays für eine Zeit der Übergänge

      • 192 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      Was wissen wir über die Zeit, in der wir leben? Eins ist sicher: Wir spüren, dass die Dinge sich verändern. In 20 kurzen, klarsichtigen Essays wagt Stefan Hertmans einen Versuch, den großen gesellschaftlichen Verschiebungen der Gegenwart auf den Zahn zu fühlen. Mutig und differenziert greift er in aktuelle Debatten ein und liefert dringend gebotene und erhellende Zeitdiagnosen zu Themen wie Klimakrise, Identitätspolitik, Demokratie, Migration und technologischem Wandel.

      Die Suche nach der Gegenwart2024
    • De opgang

      • 540 páginas
      • 19 horas de lectura
      De opgang2022
      3,0
    • The Ascent

      • 384 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      The dazzling new novel by Stefan Hertmans, author of the modern classic War and Turpentine. 'Magnificent' Philippe Sands 'Powerful and humane' Observer 'An utterly masterly book' Jonathan Coe In 1979, Stefan Hertmans fell in love with a dilapidated old house in Ghent, Belgium, which he restored to become his peaceful sanctuary. Now, all these years later, he learns that a bust of Hitler once sat on the mantelpiece, and a war criminal and his family relaxed in its rooms. This shocking discovery sends Hertmans off to the archives, to uncover the secrets of the house and to reimagine this man's life and expose the atrocities he's responsible for. We see Willem Verhulst as a weak, narcissistic man who climbed high in the ranks of the SS; a fascinating case study for the cruel and perverse mentality of the Nazis. The Ascent portrays the deep tragedy of Flemish collaboration during the Second World War, as Hertmans masterfully brings history and the house to life, imagining individual lives to tell the greater European story. Translated from the Dutch by David McKay

      The Ascent2022
      4,0
    • The Convert

      • 304 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      A brilliant reconstruction of an incredible journey across medieval Europe to Egypt, and an untold story of forbidden love. In the small village in Provence where Stefan Hertmans has made his home, people have long spoken of an ancient pogrom and hidden treasure. Then, at the end of the nineteenth century, an extraordinary collection of Jewish documents was found in a synagogue in Cairo. Hertmans has based The Convert on these historical sources, tracing the life of a young Christian noblewoman who abandoned everything for the love of a rabbi's son. In this startlingly contemporary novel, Hertmans follows in her footsteps as the lovers flee through France together, pursued by crusading knights, and recounts her dazzling journey full of love and hardship, courage and hate, as she journeys on towards Jerusalem alone. The Convert brings the chaos of the Middle Ages to life with boundless imagination and stylistic ingenuity, portraying the tragic love story of a woman in exile and a world in flux.

      The Convert2016
      3,9
    • The Great Swindle

      • 464 páginas
      • 17 horas de lectura

      The year is 1918, the war on the Western Front all but over. An ambitious officer, Lieutenant Henry D'Aulnay-Pradelle, sends two soldiers over the top and then surreptitiously shoots them in the back to incite his men to attack the German lines. When another of D'Aulnay-Pradelle's soldiers, Albert Maillard, reaches the bodies and discovers how they died, the lieutenant shoves him into a shell hole to silence him. Albert is rescued by fellow soldier, the artist Edouard Péricourt, who takes a bullet in the face. The war ends and both men recover, but Edouard is permanently disfigured, and fakes his death to prevent his family from seeing him as a cripple. In gratitude for Edouard's rescue, Albert becomes the injured man's companion and caregiver. Finding that the postwar gratitude for the soldiers' service is nothing more than lip-service to an empty idea, the two men scramble to survive, ultimately devising a scam to take money for never-to-be-built war memorials from small towns. Meanwhile, Lieutenant Pradelle has married Edouard's sister Madeline and is running a scam of his own that involves the exhumation of war victims. In this sorrowful, heart-searching novel, the interwoven lives of these three men create a tapestry of the human condition as seen through the lens of war, revealing brutality and compassion, heroism and cowardice, in equal measure

      The Great Swindle2015
      4,3
    • War and turpentine

      • 304 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Longlisted for the International Man Booker Prize A New York Times Top 10 Best Book of the Year An Economist Best Book of the Year Longlisted for the Best Translated Book Award The story of Urbain Martien lies con­tained in two notebooks he left behind when he died. In War and Turpentine, his grandson, a writer, retells his grandfather’s story, the notebooks providing a key to the locked chambers of Urbain’s memory. But who is he, really? There is Urbain the child of a lowly church painter; Urbain the young man, who narrowly escapes death in an iron foundry; Urbain the soldier; and Urbain the man, married to his true love's sister, haunted by the war and his interrupted dreams of life as an artist. Wrestling with this tale, the grandson straddles past and present, searching for a way to understand his own part in both. As artfully rendered as a Renais­sance fresco, War and Turpentine paints an ex­traordinary portrait of a man, re­vealing how a single life can echo through the ages.

      War and turpentine2013
      3,9
    • Bloem in Brussel

      Literaire wandelingen

      • 223 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Impressies van 24 Belgische en Nederlandse schrijvers van enkele wandelroutes door Brussel. De stad wordt bekeken en becommentarieerd door Bloem, het personage dat de schrijvers voor de gelegenheid in het leven riepen. Bloem in Brussel laat zich als een literaire wandelgids lezen en gebruiken.

      Bloem in Brussel2000
    • Amselbach

      • 205 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Aus dem Niederländ. von Kötz, Kathrin Roman 205 S.

      Amselbach1998
    • Intercities

      • 240 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      "Forgetting is a strange power, because it makes memory possible. That is why all architecture from the past is something like the music of space, which surrounds us and sends us images that we have constantly to interpret." In Intercities, Stefan Hertmans thinks about what constitutes identity in present-day Europe. Looking at people and cities from the periphery, he tries to discover an "archaeology of streets and faces" which could bring him closer to himself. Set in peripheral cities such as Trieste, Marseille, Dresden and Bratislava, and in major ones like Vienna and Amsterdam, Intercities is about the feeling of being abroad, of losing part of one's self in order to gain a richer life. Mingling travel stories with philosophical reflections, Hertmans's poetic text proves the sixteenth-century observation that every journey is a "voyage around your own chamber". His book is a personal statement about living in Europe today which looks beyond the surface to the heart of contemporary urban existence.

      Intercities1998
      3,4