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Frederik van Eeden (1860–1932)

Author of The Quest

64+ Works 942 Members 20 Reviews 5 Favorited

About the Author

In his turn-of-the-century novel about a woman's sexual urges, The Deeps of Deliverance (1900), the author's handling of the topics of erotic passion, drug abuse, and prostitution reveals his professional training as a psychiatrist. Van Eeden also is a leading figure in the field of Netherlandic show more literary history: He played an active part in the Tachtiger-beweging (The Movement of the Eighties) which marks the beginning of modern Dutch literature. Philosophically, he began as an idealistic reformer. Van Eeden's influence can be gauged by the fact that, in addition to publishing several outstanding novels, he corresponded and worked extensively with prominent persons in the world of science, such as Arthur Schopenhauer, Friedrich Nietsche, and Sigmund Freud. He and Upton Sinclair also kept up an exchange of letters. Appreciation for the work of van Eeden is shown by the contributions of these and other world leaders in the Liber Amicorum (1930) where van Eeden is presented as a unique and irreplaceable figure. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Image from Happy Humanity (1912) by Frederik van Eeden

Series

Works by Frederik van Eeden

The Quest (1884) 374 copies, 12 reviews
The Deeps of Deliverance (1900) 290 copies, 5 reviews
De kleine Johannes (1887) 35 copies
De kleine Johannes. [Dl. 1] (2009) 23 copies, 2 reviews
The Bride of Dreams (1979) 21 copies
Pauls ontwaken (1913) 16 copies
Johannes Viator (1892) 14 copies
Grassprietjes (1985) 12 copies
De kleine Johannes. 3 (1906) 9 copies, 1 review
De kleine Johannes 2 (1905) 7 copies
Van de passielooze lelie (2010) 5 copies
Dromenboek (1979) 4 copies
Dante en Beatrice (1917) 3 copies
Dagboek deel 2 1901-1910 (1971) 3 copies
Lioba 2 copies
Dagboek deel 4 1919-1923 (1971) 2 copies
Kabir 2 copies
Dagboek 1878-1923 (1971) 2 copies
Studies (2010) 1 copy
Studies. Tweede reeks (2010) 1 copy

Associated Works

Gitanjali (1910) — Translator, some editions — 1,541 copies, 21 reviews
Altered States of Consciousness: A Book of Readings (1969) — Contributor — 272 copies, 2 reviews
Domweg gelukkig, in de Dapperstraat : de bekendste gedichten uit de Nederlandse literatuur (1990) — Contributor; Contributor — 227 copies, 2 reviews
De Nederlandse poëzie van de negentiende en twintigste eeuw in duizend en enige gedichten (1979) — Contributor, some editions — 208 copies, 1 review
King Coal (1917) — Introduction, some editions — 189 copies, 1 review
The Crescent Moon (1913) — Translator, some editions — 146 copies, 2 reviews
Het gevleugelde hobbelpaard (1961) — Contributor — 18 copies, 1 review
Nederlandse nonsens op rijm — Contributor — 17 copies
Naar huis (1994) — Contributor — 16 copies

Tagged

1001 (9) 19th century (23) 20th century (9) classic (7) diary (9) drama (10) Dutch (46) Dutch literature (112) Dutch poetry (9) ebook (7) fairy tales (12) fiction (52) First Edition (21) Frederik van Eeden (20) hardcover (18) HHW (11) literature (48) man (8) Nederlandse schrijver (8) Netherlands (24) novel (23) PB (9) philosophy (12) poetry (19) prose (23) psychiatry (10) Roman (62) suicide (10) Tachtigers (17) to-read (21)

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Reviews

23 reviews
Johannes is a sensitive Dutch boy who stumbles into an adventure that reminded me of Alice in Wonderland. In this coming of age tale, he sees fairies, goblins, and even death who all help teach him about what it means to be a good person. Eventually he meets Markus, and although we never learn much about him, he is very similar to Jesus.

I found this novel enchanting and enigmatical. This isn’t a book you can read quickly because it requires a lot of thought. It was obvious that van Eeden show more was making a statement about Christianity, but it took me most of the novel to figure out whether he was for it or against it. I did enjoy the story, but I wish it had been a little more concrete and easier to understand. show less
Van Eeden (1860-1932) was a prominent Dutch psychiatrist and author. An admirer of Thoreau, he had extensive professional contacts with the likes of Sigmund Freud and Herman Hesse. All of these influences are in evidence in this novel of the coming of age of De Kleine Johannes. Johannes is an everyman who struggles to find meaning in a world where it is far too obvious to him from an early age that injustice and struggle abound.
Johannes’s first adventures are magical garden excursions show more with his elvish friend Windekind who appears originally in the form of a dragonfly. Windekind shrinks Johannes down to his own size and together they explore the glories of nature, plunging down rabbit holes, romping in flowery meadows, and even discussing aggression v. pacifism with the ironically self-named “peace ants.” Gradually the boy encounters darker spirits including Death himself (not a bad fellow as it turns out) and eventually the devil. He leaves home under the influence of these spirits and falls in with a succession of humans who personify various philosophies.
The most profound influence on Johannes is a Christ-like character named Marcus who mentors the child when he is around but comes and goes from the narrative rather abruptly at times as Johannes is left to discover more about life on his own. Marcus reappears with regularity to debunk the most dearly held beliefs of whichever group is in ascendency at the time. Naturally, speaking truth to power usually gets Marcus, and sometimes by association Johannes, shunned, arrested, incarcerated, or even beaten nearly to death. In this fashion van Eeden takes on mainline Protestantism, spiritualism, Buddhism, Catholicism, international socialism, and finally the Dutch monarchy.
Some of the most beautiful imagery occurs in the earliest passages as Johannes and Windekind are exploring the glories of nature. Van Eeden’s father was a prominent botanist and that certainly shows in the wonderful details he brings to the microcosms explored by the shrunken protagonist. One of the creepiest sections on the other hand has a tiny Johannes following an earthworm, an earwig, and the darker spirit Pluizer through a series of decaying coffins complete with decomposing corpses in a sequence reminiscent of Scrooge’s adventure with the ghost of Christmas future.
While this is not a novel that I would have picked up for myself for pleasure as I generally have a low tolerance for spirituality and philosophy, I am glad that I read it. Though there was a bit of a disconnect though between van Eeden’s obviously lofty ideals for a glorious harmonious future human society and the rather disparaging way that he speaks of the great masses of the working poor. I also wondered at one point whether he was going to visit Judaism but after one small snippet of vitriolic anti-Semitism in another section I ended up relieved that we didn’t go there.
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Beautiful, and very impressive... Started reading it because I'm currently reading Walden and van Eeden was a follower of Thoreau's ideas. The story certainly expresses a love of nature and is a philosophical work, besides being a fairy-tale about a young boy.
I found it very gripping, more so than I had expected. It really makes you think about how we live and how the world works.
The ending is beautiful and touching.
Deze las ik voor mijn lijst, de vier sterren komen ook uit die tijd. Ik vond het verhaal van denkende Hedwig, De taal zal me hebben aangesproken. We hadden het thema noodlot binnen het naturalisme in de les besproken, dus ik zal dat er toen in gelezen/opgemerkt hebben.

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Works
64
Also by
19
Members
942
Popularity
#27,278
Rating
3.8
Reviews
20
ISBNs
108
Languages
4
Favorited
5

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