Simon Carmiggelt was a Dutch writer who became a well known public figure in the Netherlands because of his daily newspaper columns and his television appearances.
Biography
Simon Johannes Carmiggelt was born on 7 October 1913 in The Hague, the second son of Herman Carmiggelt and Adriana Bik. He had one older brother, Jan. Simon did not turn out to be a very bright student and he left secondary school in 1929. He enjoyed working as an editor for the school paper though, and he was determined to become a journalist. After various editorial jobs, he became a reporter for the socialist newspaper Het Volk. Later on he worked for the same paper as a drama critic. He also wrote short columns about daily life in The Hague, which he called Kleinigheden. In 1939 Simon married Tiny de Goey. A year later she gave birth to a daughter, Marianne. In the same year the first collection of Kleinigheden was published, named Vijftig dwaasheden. When the Germans invaded the Netherlands in 1940 and Het Volk was taken over and censored, Carmiggelt resigned from the paper. During the war he had all sorts of small jobs, but he secretly got in touch with the Dutch resistance and worked for the underground newspaperHet Parool. He was responsible for the lay-out and printing of the paper. He also wrote a few stories for Het Parool. In 1943 Simon's brother Jan was arrested by the Germans for aiding persons in hiding. He was taken to Herzogenbusch concentration camp, where he died of exhaustion on 26 September 1943. Jan's death was to change the rest of Simon's life; he would never fully overcome the trauma it caused. After the war he again started to write columns for Het Parool. He signed them as 'Kronkel'. His Kronkels became very famous for their melancholic, sometimes sombre tone and the ironic use of formal language. Many columns were about unsuccessful, disillusioned people in cafes and bars, who told the writer about their lives. But Carmiggelt also wrote about his children and later his grandchildren, his cats and other small events in his life. His work became very popular and he received various Dutch literary prizes. Together with the Dutch Indo author and essayist Tjalie Robinson he is credited with establishing a whole new genre in Dutch literature that found successors like Rudy Kousbroek. In 1977 Carmiggelt started a secret liaison with the author Renate Rubinstein. She wrote a book about this, titled Mijn beter ik, which was published when both she and Simon had died. Simon Carmiggelt's last Kronkel was published in 1983. On 30 November 1987 he died of a heart attack. A year after his death, a statue of Carmiggelt was placed near his former house in Amsterdam and one of him and his wife on a park bench near his summer house in De Steeg. This last statue was stolen in the weekend of 21 January 2012. It was retrieved on 25 January, sawn into many pieces. Three men have been arrested in relation to this event; the motive is still unclear. The statue was pieced together by the sculptor Wik Kuijl and then re-unveiled in its original site on 23 January 2013.
Selected bibliography
1940 - Vijftig dwaasheden
1940 - 'Honderd dwaasheden
1948 - Allemaal onzin
1948 - Het jammerhout
1950 - Klein beginnen
1951 - Omnibus
1952 - Poespas
1954 - Al mijn gal
1954 - Articles de Paris
1955 - Duivenmelken
1956 - Fabriekswater
1956 - Kwartet
1956 - Spijbelen
1957 - Haasje over
1959 - Een toontje lager
1961 - Alle orgels slapen
1961 - Een stoet van dwergen
1962 - Dag opa
1962 - Kroeglopen I
1962 - Tussen twee stoelen
1963 - Oude mensen
1963 - We leven nog
1964 - Later is te laat
1964 - Kinderen
1965 - Kroeglopen II
1965 - Fluiten in het donker
1965 - Mooi weer vandaag
1967 - Morgen zien we wel weer
1968 - Drie van vroeger
1968 - Je blijft lachen
1969 - Mijn moeder had gelijk
1970 - Twijfelen is toegestaan
1971 - Gewoon maar doorgaan
1972 - Ik mag niet mopperen
1973 - Elke ochtend opstaan
1974 - Brood voor de vogeltjes
1975 - Slenteren
1975 - Maatschappelijk verkeer
1976 - Dwaasheden
1977 - Vroeger kon je lachen
1978 - Bemoei je d'r niet mee
1979 - De rest van je leven
1979 - Mooi kado
1980 - De avond valt
1980 - Residentie van mijn jeugd
1981 - Een Hollander in Parijs
1981 - Verhaaltjes van vroeger
1982 - Welverdiende onrust
1983 - De Amsterdamse kroeg
1983 - Met de neus in de boeken
1983 - Mag 't een ietsje meer zijn
1984 - Ik red me wel
1984 - Vreugden en verschrikkingen van de dronkenschap