Marieke Lucas Rijneveld (born 20 April 1991 in Nieuwendijk, the Netherlands) is a Dutch writer.[1][2] Rijneveld won the 2020 International Booker Prize together with his translator Michele Hutchison for the debut novel The Discomfort of Evening.[3] Rijneveld is the first Dutch author to win the prize,[4] the first non-binary person to do so[5] and only the third Dutch author to be nominated.
Dutch poet and writer
Marieke Lucas Rijneveld
Rijneveld in 2022
Born
(1991-04-20) 20 April 1991 (age31) Nieuwendijk, the Netherlands
Occupation
Writer, poet
Nationality
Dutch
Genre
Novels, verse
Yearsactive
2015–present
Notable awards
International Booker Prize 2020
Life
Marieke Lucas Rijneveld (2015)
Rijneveld grew up in a Reformed protestant family on a farm in North Brabant in the Netherlands.[1][6] Rijneveld has said that his debut novel, translated into English as The Discomfort of Evening, is inspired partly by the death of his brother when the author was three.[1] It took him six years to complete the novel.[7]
Rijneveld is said to have developed an interest in writing in primary school after reading J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, which he borrowed from the local library.[7][8] Because in Reformed circles references to magic are considered taboo, Rijneveld copied out the whole book onto his computer so he could re-read it upon returning the novel.[7] Rijneveld identifies as both male and female, and adopted the second first name Lucas at the age of nineteen, having been bullied in secondary school because of his "boyish appearance and nature".[9] At the start of January 2022, Rijneveld announced that he uses he/him personal pronouns in English,[10] having previously used they/them pronouns,[11] and zij/haar (she/her) in Dutch.[12]
Rijneveld said Jan Wolkers, who also grew up in a Reformed environment, is his idol.[7] His interest in poetry was ignited while attending speech therapy sessions and looking at pictures with poetry on them while waiting for the therapy session. When Rijneveld started making progress in therapy, he was allowed to read those poems by the therapist.[9]
Rijneveld studied to become a Dutch teacher, but dropped out to focus on writing.[9] He published the poetry collection Kalfsvlies in 2015, and that same year was named the most promising new Dutch writer.[13] He broke through, nationally and internationally, with his debut novel The Discomfort of Evening, whose English translation received positive reviews and won the International Booker Prize in 2020. A second book of poetry followed in 2019 and a second novel, Mijn lieve gunsteling, in 2020.[14]
Rijneveld served on the editorial team of de Revisor, a Dutch literary periodical, in 2016.[15]
In 2021, Rijneveld was selected by American poet Amanda Gorman to translate her work into Dutch. Rijneveld initially accepted the commission, but later withdrew after Dutch race advocate Janice Deul criticised the publisher for commissioning a white translator for the work of a black poet.[16]
Works
Poetry collections
Kalfsvlies, 2015 (English: Calf's caul, excerpts from which were translated into English by Sarah Timmer Harvey and shortlisted for Asymptote magazine's "Close Approximations" translation contest in 2017).[17][18]
L. Rijneveld, Marieke (April 2021). Fantoommerrie. www.goodreads.com (in Dutch). Amsterdam: Atlas Contact Publishers. ISBN9789025453459. OCLC1292473292. Retrieved 2022-02-01.
L. Rijneveld, Marieke (January 2022). Komijnsplitsers. Goodreads (in Dutch). Amsterdam; Antwerp: Atlas Contact Publishers. ISBN9789025471200. OCLC1293293905. Retrieved 2022-02-01.
Rijneveld, Marieke Lucas (2022). Het warmtefort. Amsterdam: Collectieve Propaganda van het Nederlandse Boek (Stichting CPNB). ISBN9789059658837. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
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