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Publieke werken by Thomas Rosenboom
Publieke werken by Thomas Rosenboom





Publieke werken by Thomas Rosenboom

The following year, Gewassen vlees won the prestigious Libris Prize for Literature.

Publieke werken by Thomas Rosenboom

“I sings and blares, it rumbles and raves, it hums and hisses,” is how NRC Handelsblad described Rosenboom’s virtuoso command of the Dutch language. The author had previously displayed his talent with the collection of his short stories De mensen thuis (Those at Home, 1983) and the psychological thriller Vriend van verdienste (Honourable Friend, 1985), but the true breakthrough came in 1995. At the beginning of the twenty-first century we have come to learn some of the disastrous effects of these beliefs.“A truly remarkable book, in the tradition of great authors such as Vestdijk and Nabokov” – is how one Dutch reviewer characterized Thomas Rosenboom’s Gewassen vlees (Washed Flesh, 1995). Rosenboom unforgettably succeeds in evoking a world which bred belief in progress, social involvement and trust in technology and science. Vedder and Anijs will not see the world as it really is, and will not face the fact that they are much less important than they are able to bear.

Publieke werken by Thomas Rosenboom

Publieke werken illustrates the premise from the Book of Ecclesiastes that all is vanity. Everything collapses like a house of cards. The blind trust which Vedder has in his negotiating position, and which Anijs has in his role as good doer, have distrastrous results when the sale of the house in the end falls through. He gets so caught up in this role that he goes beyond the bounds of professionalism and performs surgery, arousing the anger of the local doctor. The pharmacist has developed a soft spot for them, and they have come to regard Anijs as a saviour. Anijs has managed to persuade Vedder to invest the money in an emigration project which offers a group of peat cutters a new future in America. The neighbour is not the only one bound to fall into the same trap. But the price Vedder asks is too high and his sole negotiating technique is to keep repeating his asking price. Vedder reads in the newspaper that a hotel is to be built on the land his house stands on, just opposite the new Amsterdam Central Station, and thinks he has an excellent bargaining position with regard to the company developer. In Publieke werken it is the violin-maker Vedder and his nephew Anijs, a country pharmacist, who walk into the trap of their own making, their eyes wide open.







Publieke werken by Thomas Rosenboom