Peter De Vries (born Feb. 27, 1910, Chicago, Ill., U.S.—died Sept. 28, 1993, Norwalk, Conn.) was an American editor and novelist widely known as a satirist, linguist, and comic visionary.
De Vries was the son of Dutch immigrants to the United States and was reared in a Calvinist environment on Chicago’s South Side. He graduated (1931) from Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich. After several years (1938–44) as an editor for Poetry magazine in Chicago, he joined the editorial staff of The New Yorker and thereafter made his home in Connecticut.
Although De Vries’ first novel, But Who Wakes the Bugler? (1940), was most notable for having been illustrated by the cartoonist Charles Addams, and although his next two novels were hardly noticed at all, his first book of short stories, No But I Saw the Movie (1952), won critical acclaim, and his subsequent novel, The Tunnel of Love (1954), became a best-seller and was successfully adapted both as a play and as a motion picture. Noted for being light on plot and filled with wit, puns, and sardonic humor, De Vries’ novels were appreciated for their imaginative wordplay and ironic vision. His later works include, among others, Comfort Me with Apples (1956), The Tents of Wickedness (1959), Reuben, Reuben (1964), Madder Music (1977), and Slouching Towards Kalamazoo (1983).