Harry Mulisch

Personal Info

Known For Writer

Gender Male

Birthday 1927-07-29

Deathday 2010-10-30 (83 years old)

Place of Birth Haarlem, Netherlands

Harry Mulisch

Biography

Harry Kurt Victor Mulisch (1927–2010) was a Dutch writer. He wrote more than 80 novels, plays, essays, poems, and philosophical reflections. Mulisch's works have been translated into over thirty languages. Along with Willem Frederik Hermans and Gerard Reve, Mulisch is considered one of the "Great Three" (De Grote Drie) of Dutch postwar literature. His novel The Assault (1982) was adapted into a film that won both a Golden Globe and an Academy Award. A 2007 poll of NRC Handelsblad readers voted his novel The Discovery of Heaven (1992) the greatest Dutch book ever written. He was regularly mentioned as a possible future Nobel laureate. He won the 2007 International Nonino Prize in Italy. A frequent theme in his work is the Second World War. His father had worked for the Germans during the war and went to prison for three years afterwards. As the war spanned most of Mulisch's formative phase, it had a defining influence on his life and work. In 1963, he wrote a non-fiction work about the Eichmann case: Criminal Case 40/61.

Known For

Writer

2001
The Discovery of Heaven

as Original Story

2001
The Room

as Story

1986
The Assault

as Novel

1979
Twice a Woman

as Novel

1976
Volk en vaderliefde

as Scenario Writer

Actor