Gerard Reve
On My Way to the End (Op weg naar het einde)
Shamelessly candid
In the 1960s Gerard Reve’s career entered a new phase when he discovered that the letter was his ideal literary form. It allowed him to adopt a direct, confrontational tone, combined with formal, almost solemn, syntax and vocabulary. Reve wrote openly and in great detail about his alcoholism, his homosexuality, his preoccupation with death and his adoration of God and the Virgin Mary. As the main character of his letters, he described his life with remarkable candour, contributing to his own legend in the process. In a 1998 interview he said, ‘I’m a Great Writer, but it’s not as if I’m not stuck up about it.’
The letters in On My Way to the End shocked Dutch readers of 1963 with their complete lack of taboo and shameless frankness. In the opening ‘Letter from Edinburgh’, Reve talks about attending a writers’ congress in the Scottish capital and describes his anger on discovering that certain topics there, particularly homosexuality and sodomy, were considered beyond the pale. ‘As a homosexual,’ Reve wrote, ‘I will never let anyone forbid me from making homosexuality the subject of my work.’ He spent the rest of his creative life making this clear.
Yet it is not groundbreaking honesty that has made On My Way to the End one of the undisputed masterpieces of Dutch literature. The book’s power lies in the author’s firm grasp of what he calls ‘pointless facts’. At first glance, it may seem as if Reve is simply writing down whatever pops into his head (‘mindless bullshit, blessed by the Almighty’, as he later called it), but upon closer examination, all the personal anecdotes, travel stories and cynical jokes are part of an intricate literary pattern. Gradually the problem of writing itself emerges as one of the book’s themes. The only way to comprehend the world is by attempting to bring order to it, and one can only bring order to life by writing about it.
In the final analysis, it is Reve’s brilliant style that won these ‘letters from faraway places’ a place in the canon. His sentences are more exuberant and baroque than in his earlier work, and he possesses that rare gift of being able to make his reader cry and laugh at the same time.
Publisher
De Bezige Bij
Van Miereveldstraat 1
NL - 1071 DW Amsterdam
TEL. +31 20 305 98 10
FAX +31 20 305 98 24
E-mail: info@debezigebij.nl
Website: www.debezigebij.nl
Rights
Andrew Nurnberg Associates Ltd.
E-mail: contact@andrewnurnberg.com
Website: www.andrewnurnberg.com
Publishing details
Op weg naar het einde (1963, 188 pp)
Biography
Gerard Reve’s (1923-2006) most widely read book is his first novel De avonden (The Evenings, 1947). The much reprinted and controversial epistolary books Op weg naar het einde (On My Way to the End, 1963) and Nader tot U (Nearer to Thee, 1966), in which Reve opened his heart about his homosexuality and his conversion to Catholicism, were instrumental in establishing the author as a public figure in the Netherlands. Over the years he published a large series of autobiographical epistolary books, and several novels: Oud en eenzaam (Old and Lonely, 1978), Moeder en Zoon (Mother and Son, 1980), Bezorgde Ouders (Parents Worry, 1989). Reve was awarded the P.C. Hooft Prize in 1968 and the Dutch Literature Prize (Prijs der Nederlandse Letteren) in 2001.
Website: www.nadertotreve.nl/
Quotes
The press on Parents Worry:
This is a tragicomic masterpiece that explores with imaginative integrity the obscene and blasphemous frontiers of our nature.
Harriet Gilbert in The Listener
