あらすじ
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 27. Chapters: Anna Rutgers van der Loeff, Annie M. G. Schmidt, Barthold Fles, Bas Haring, Bert Bakker, Cissy van Marxveldt, Cornelis Johannes Kieviet, Dick Bruna, Dick Laan, Felix Thijssen, Ferry Piekart, Godfried Bomans, Guus Kuijer, Hans Andreus, Hans Heyting, Han G. Hoekstra, Hendrik Willem van Loon, Hilda van Stockum, Ida Vos, Janwillem van de Wetering, Jan Terlouw, Jan van Oort, Johanna Reiss, Johan Fabricius, Leo Lionni, Lizzy Ansingh, Mary van der Valk, Max Velthuijs, Mirjam Oldenhave, Nienke van Hichtum, Paul Biegel, Peter Smit (writer), Piet Bakker (writer), Piet Jongeling, Rindert Kromhout, Simone van der Vlugt, Thea Beckman, Tjibbe Veldkamp, Tonke Dragt, Toon Tellegen, Willem van den Hout, Wil Huygen, Wim Hofman, Wim Hora Adema. Excerpt: Barthold Fles (February 7, 1902 - December 19, 1989) was a Dutch-American literary agent, author, translator, editor and publisher. Among his many clients were Raymond Loewy, Heinrich Mann, Joseph Roth, Felix Salten, Ignazio Silone, Bruno Walter and Arnold Zweig. Barthold "Bart" Fles was born in Amsterdam into an assimilating Jewish family. His father, Louis Fles, was a successful businessman and an activist against religion. Barthold had a tense relationship with his father, who wanted him into his business, while the young Fles was mostly interested in reading. Barthold read in Dutch, German, English, and French, anytime and at a tremendous pace. He did study business at a vocational school and found employment at De Lange publishers. In 1923 he left for the United States. In New York Fles found temporary employment as a violinist, painting apartments, selling vacuum cleaners and working for publishers. In 1933 he established a literary agency in Manhattan, New York. Initially many of his clients were German refugees and other foreign authors. He organized evenings for these...