Naima El Bezaz
Naima El Bezaz (born 1974 in Meknes, Morocco) is a Moroccan-Dutch writer, who also gives lectures and writes stories, essays and columns. Her family immigrated to The Netherlands when she was four years old. After finishing high school she went to college, but quit to start a career in writing. She met author Yvonne Kroonenberg at a lecture who got her into contact with publisher "Contact", resulting in her first book, "The Way North". This title appeared in 1996 and for this book she received the "Jenny Smelik-IBBY-prijs", an award for authors of children's or youth literature focusing on miniority children in the Netherlands. The novel became very popular among Dutch youths. In 2002 her second novel The Devil's Lover appeared and the story bundle became an instant bestseller. In Jack Spijkerman's Kopspijkers she read an explicit passage of her book, angering Muslims and Christians. In September 2006 her third and most controversial book appears, The Expelled One is full of explicit content and criticism of religious dogmatism. Uitgeverij Contact calls it "The Moroccan-Dutch Turks Fruit" (referring to the famous taboo breaking Jan Wolkers novel).[1][2]
Works
- 1995 De weg naar het noorden (The Way North)
- 1999 Minnares van de duivel (The Devil's Lover)
- 2006 De verstotene (The Expelled One)
- 2008 Het gelukssyndroom (The Happiness Syndrome)
- 2010 Vinexvrouwen (New Suburben Women)
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Naima El Bezaz. |
- ↑ "Biografie" (in Dutch). Naima El Bezaz. Retrieved 2009-05-28.
- ↑ "Naima El Bezaz" (in Dutch). Dichter aan huis. Retrieved 2009-05-28.