Willem Frederik Hermans (born Sept. 1, 1921, Amsterdam, Neth.—died April 27, 1995) was a Dutch satirical novelist who vehemently attacked the ills and hypocrisies of society.
Hermans’ early novels and stories are overcast with dark, disillusioned tones. De tranen der acacia’s (1949; “The Tears of the Acacias”), which features a feckless fighter, satirizes the Dutch Resistance to Nazi occupation during World War II. He returned to the war as a theme for his noted short novel “Het behouden huis” (1952; “The House of Refuge”) and the novel De donkere kamer van Damocles (1958; The Dark Room of Damocles); the latter was filmed as Als twee druppels water (“Like Two Drops of Water”) in 1963. Hermans rejected the possibility of human virtue, seeing the individual as either predator or prey, and characterized his own philosophy as “creative nihilism.”
Hermans, who was a geologist, taught at the University of Groningen from 1953 to 1973 and found subject matter for fiction in his profession. The geologist protagonist of Nooit meer slapen (1966; “Never to Sleep Again”) comes to doubt the existence of scientific truth, and Hermans satirized academic communities in the novels Onder professoren (1975; “Among Professors”) and Uit talloos veel miljoenen (1981; “From Countless Millions”). He also wrote poetry, plays, criticism, and scientific works. A later novel is Au pair (1989).