Charlotte Van den Broeck (Author)
Charlotte Van den Broeck (born in 1991) is a Belgian author. Her
first collection of poetry, Chameleon (2015), was awarded the
Herman de Coninck Debut Prize. Nachtroer (2017) won the triennial
Paul Snoek Prize for the best collection of Dutch-language poems.
David Colmer's English translation of these two collections was
published as a single volume by Bloodaxe Books in 2020. In 2019 she
published her prose debut Waagstukken (Bold Ventures). The book was
a Dutch bestseller, won the Confituur Boekhandels Prize, the Dr
Wijnaendts Francken Prize and was shortlisted for the Boekenbon
Literature Prize and the Jan Hanlo Essay Prize. Her third
collection of poems, Earth Rubbings, was published in Dutch in
2021.
Beguiling . . . In our moment of "quiet quitting," resistance to
corporate domination and a conviction that capitalism is in decay,
Bold Ventures does arrive as a timely interrogation of what,
exactly, constitutes success - of how to live
*New York Times*
Everyone fails every day, but an architect's failure is inescapably
visible, a public humiliation, even when it doesn't occasion loss
of life . . . That the relationship between creator and creation
can become so deleterious is a source of obsession for Charlotte
Van den Broeck . . . Bold Ventures resembles a pop version of Iain
Sinclair's psychogeography or Out of Sheer Rage, Geoff Dyer's
anti-biography of DH Lawrence
*Guardian*
Bold Ventures is a unique survey of artistic creation, and is full
of memorable scenes and insights
*Literary Review*
What a sensible, intelligent and beautiful book
*Stefan Hertmans, author of War and Turpentine*
A darkly comic meditation on the nature of creativity and the
narrow margins between triumph and despair. Part memoir, part
travelogue and part reflection, this unique and hugely engaging
book takes a fresh look at the tragicomic condition of being
human
*Carolyn Steel, author of Sitopia*
A gorgeous and roving debut . . . Van den Broeck's exploration
extends beyond the lives and works of her subjects, turning into
both a philosophical meditation on creativity and a brilliant
character study of misunderstood artists. The result is a
genre-bending work that's sure to fascinate those interested in art
and architecture, as well as anyone curious about the dangerous
mechanisms of the creative mind
*Publishers Weekly (starred review)*
While going on essayistic quests that take her around the globe,
Van den Broeck traces stories of self-complacency, fear of failure
and destiny. Indirectly, she researches the link between building
and writing. Isn't every author bold by default, after all? In Bold
Ventures she lives up to her ambition
*De Morgen*
Van den Broeck has a very keen eye. But she also has a great mind,
making transitions between philosophical contemplations and
journalistic passages seem effortless
*De Standaard*
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