Veijo Meri (born December 31, 1928, Viborg, Finland—died June 21, 2015, Helsinki) was a Finnish novelist, poet, and dramatist of the generation of the 1960s.
Meri devoted many of his novels and dramas to the depiction of war. Unlike his many Finnish predecessors, however, he did not treat war in the heroic mode. His soldiers existed in an incoherent and farcical world. In Manillaköysi (1957; The Manila Rope), the main character deserts, taking with him a rope for which he is willing to risk his life, though he has no use for the rope. His journey home is interspersed with absurd stories from the war. Vuoden 1918 taphatumat (1960; “Incidents 1918”) describes the Finnish civil war (1918) as a chain of confused and disconnected actions. Just as bizarre is Everstin autonkuljettaja (1966; “The Colonel’s Driver”), in which a driver zigzags through the war zones across more than half of Finland to fetch an insignificant briefcase that a colonel has happened to forget.
In Peiliin piiretty nainen (1963; “Woman in the Mirror”) and Suku (1968; “The Family”), Meri dealt with contemporary psychological relationships. He also wrote a biography of the 19th-century Finnish writer Aleksis Kivi (1974) and Pohjantähden alla: Kirjoituksia Suomen historiasta (1999; Beneath the Polar Star: Glimpses of Finnish History). Meri’s most popular play, Sotamies Jokisen vihkiloma (1965; Private Jokinen’s Marriage Leave), is set in the war years of the 1940s. An autobiography, Kersantin poika (“The Son of a Sergeant”), was published in 1971.