Picture of author.

Dola de Jong (1911–2003)

Autor(a) de The Tree and the Vine

19 Works 220 Membros 3 Reviews

About the Author

Inclui os nomes: Dola De Jong, Dola de Jong

Séries

Obras de Dola de Jong

The Tree and the Vine (1954) 114 cópias
The Field (1979) 38 cópias
The Level Land (1943) 17 cópias
The House on Charlton Street (1962) 10 cópias
Return to the Level Land (1947) 6 cópias
Between Home and Horizon (1962) 4 cópias
By marvelous agreement (1960) 3 cópias
El árbol y la enredadera (2019) 3 cópias
The whirligig of time (1964) 3 cópias
Moderne Amerikaanse verhalen — Tradutor — 3 cópias
One Summer’s Secret 1 exemplar(es)
Strážkyně domácího krbu (2018) 1 exemplar(es)
Nikkernik Nakkernak and Nokkernok (1942) 1 exemplar(es)
Dans om het hart (2022) 1 exemplar(es)
Sand For The Sandmen (1946) 1 exemplar(es)

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
Jong, Dola de
Outros nomes
Jong, Dorothea Rosalie de (birth)
Data de nascimento
1911-10-10
Data de falecimento
2003-11-19
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
Nederland
Local de nascimento
Arnhem, Gelderland, the Netherlands
Local de falecimento
Laguna Woods, California, USA
Locais de residência
Arnhem, Gelderland, the Netherlands
North Africa (1940)
USA (1941)
New York, USA
California, USA
Educação
Empire State College (1983)
Ocupação
author
dancer (8 years with the Royal Dutch Ballet)
teacher (creative writing | Empire State College)
linguist
journalist
Relacionamentos
Hoowij, Jan (husband)
Joseph, Robert H. (husband)
Joseph, Ian (son)
Organizações
Royal Dutch Ballet
Premiações
Literature Prize of Holland (1947)
Dutch Academy of Letters (1955)
Pequena biografia
Dorothea Rosalie "Dola" de Jong was born to a prosperous Jewish family in Arnhem, The Netherlands. Her parents were Salomon Louis de Jong and his wife Lotte Rosalie Benjamin, who was German by birth. She had two brothers. Her mother died when Dola was five years old.
She showed a talent for writing from a young age. Growing up, she decided to become a ballet dancer, but her conservative father opposed this idea and wanted to send her to finishing school instead. After graduating from high school, as a compromise, she became an apprentice journalist at the Nieuwe Arnhemsche Courant. Around 1930, she she moved to Amsterdam. She took advanced ballet lessons there and in the UK and became a member of the Royal Dutch Ballet. She toured with the Yvonne Georgi Ballet. To fund her dance lessons, De Jong worked as a freelance journalist, writing under the pseudonym Sourit Ballon, and also wrote some children's books.
She published her first literary novel, Dans om het hart (Dance Around the Heart), in 1939. De Jong recognized the signs that the Netherlands was no longer safe for Jews. She fled to Tangier, Morocco in April 1940, just a few weeks before Nazi Germany invaded her country. Her father, stepmother, and one brother were killed by the Nazis.
In 1941, De Jong married Jan Hoowij, a painter, and the couple moved to New York City. In New York, De Jong sold the rights to her children's book Knikkernik, Knakkernak, and Knokkernok (1942), and soon afterwards received an advance from Scribner's editor Maxwell Perkins to write a novel. That became the critically acclaimed En de akker is de wereld (English title: And the Field Is the World, 1945), which was awarded the City of Amsterdam Literature Prize in 1947. She continued to dance with Bernard van Leer's Circus Kavaljos. She won the Edgar Allan Poe Award for her 1964 mystery novel The Whirligig of Time. She was divorced from Jan Hoowij and later remarried to Robert Joseph.
After another divorce, in 1970 she moved back to the Netherlands, where she wrote for Dutch magazines and radio and published more novels. In 1978, she returned to New York, where she completed a bachelor's degree in literature at Empire State College at SUNY. After graduating at age 72, De Jong became a teacher at the university.

In the late 1980s, she started painting, and wrote for De Nieuwe Amsterdammer.
Her controversial novel
De thuiswacht, originally published in 1954, was not translated into English (as The Tree and the Vine) until 1961. It was reissued by The Feminist Press at CUNY in 1996.

Membros

Resenhas

Een Joods-Nederlands stel vlucht met een aantal weeskinderen bij het uitbreken van de Tweede Wereldoorlog naar Marokko en probeert onder moeilijke omstandigheden een bestaan op ge bouwen
½
 
Marcado
huizenga | Jan 31, 2023 |
Hoewel het boek de sfeer van net na de oorlog ademt, is de taal fris en actueel. De emoties en psychologische verwikkelingen worden onderkoeld en scherp in beeld gebracht, zonder zweem van freudiaans geïnspireerde zwaarmoedigheid. Het boek had ook vandaag (maar dan als historische roman) uitgebracht kunnen zijn.
1 vote
Marcado
Dax9 | 1 outra resenha | Jul 2, 2017 |
At root (no pun intended), The Tree and the Vine is an exceptionally told story of repression and regret. It tells the story of the erratic Erica as seen through the eyes of Bea, the friend who grows increasingly obsessed with Erica but refuses to makes sense of what she feels. The story is told in retrospect by Bea after she has come to realize that Erica was the event of her life and the most poignant emotional opportunity that she missed.

As a Jew living in the occupied Netherlands during WWII, Erica comes to a predictably bad end, but Bea's end, though she lives, is certainly nothing less than tragic as well. The novel is exceptional in the way in which Bea is able to tell of her refusal to participate in a life that obviously obsessed her from the perspective of an older woman for whom the past has now come into focus. Or has it? The psychological nuances of the story are both complex and perplexing. A good read, though highly depressing and somewhat slow for such a short book.… (mais)
1 vote
Marcado
mambo_taxi | 1 outra resenha | Sep 7, 2009 |

Listas

Prêmios

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Peter Spier Illustrator
Gerard Hordyk Illustrator
Jane Castle Illustrator
Herbert Gold Contributor
Fie Zegerius Translator
Leo Litwak Contributor
Harvey Swados Contributor
Jean Stafford Contributor
John Updike Contributor
Hortense Calisher Contributor
Truman Capote Contributor
James Purdy Contributor
Mary McCarthy Contributor
Bernard Malamud Contributor
John Cheever Contributor
Flannery O'Connor Contributor
Anatole Broyard Contributor

Estatísticas

Obras
19
Membros
220
Popularidade
#101,715
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Resenhas
3
ISBNs
24
Idiomas
8

Tabelas & Gráficos