Author | Hugo Claus |
---|---|
Original title | Het Verdriet van België |
Translator | Arnold J. Pomerans |
Cover artist | James Ensor's Music in the Vlaanderenstraat (1891) |
Language | Dutch |
Publisher | De Bezige Bij |
Publication date | 1983 |
Publication place | Belgium |
Published in English | 1994 |
ISBN | 978-0-14-018801-1 |
The Sorrow of Belgium (Dutch: Het verdriet van België) is a 1983 novel by the Belgian author Hugo Claus (1929–2008). The book, widely considered Claus's most important work and "the most important Dutch-language novel of the twentieth century",[1] is a Bildungsroman which explores themes around politics and growing up in Flanders around World War II. It has been described as "one of the great novels of postwar Europe".[2]
The Sorrow of Belgium explores the childhood and youth of Louis Seynaeve, a Flemish schoolboy living in the region of Kortrijk during World War II when Belgium was under German occupation.[3] The novel itself is a Bildungsroman and Künstlerroman,[4] formed from two sections:
The work was first published in an English translation by Arnold J. Pomerans in 1994. It was also made into a mini-series the same year.[5]
Graa Boomsma 1986
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).