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Bernlef's secret is in the way he looks at things. His attention to the ordinary, to the marginal, the so-called extra literary has not only enlarged the realm of the poetic but challenges the hierarchies and preconceived notions about what is or is not considered literary ... Bernlef's attitude towards poetry has remained virtually constant, though down the years one can discern a slight shift from inspired down-to-earthness to that of down-to-earth inspiration. ? Dutch critic Hans Kloos

Produktbeschreibung
Bernlef's secret is in the way he looks at things. His attention to the ordinary, to the marginal, the so-called extra literary has not only enlarged the realm of the poetic but challenges the hierarchies and preconceived notions about what is or is not considered literary ... Bernlef's attitude towards poetry has remained virtually constant, though down the years one can discern a slight shift from inspired down-to-earthness to that of down-to-earth inspiration. ? Dutch critic Hans Kloos
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Autorenporträt
Dutch poet, novelist, and essayist Hendrik Jan Marsman (1937-2012) took the pen name of Bernlef after a blind 8th century Frisian bard. In 1994, he was awarded the P.C. Hooft Prize for the entire body of his poetic work. A decade earlier, Bernlef won the Constantijn Huygens Award for his prose. It was as a novelist that he reached a wide audience in 1984 with Hersenschimmen (Out of Mind) in which the onslaught of dementia brought on by Alzheimer's disease was written about from the point of view of the man afflicted. It has been translated into some 20 languages.