Description

Book Synopsis
A brooding meditation on violence by a classic post-war Dutch writer who has drawn comparisons to Joseph Heller and Kurt Vonnegut. An Untouched House is a mesmerising, dark meditation on the legacy of war. An interloper and opportunist makes a grand house his own in the chaos of a war-torn countryside, only to find himself involved with occupying forces and enraged locals.

Trade Review
One of Ian McEwan’s “most underrated books”

"Two contrasting energies galvanize Hermans’s fictions. The wry invitation to find symbols and deeper meanings is balanced by a wealth of detail and meticulously described action, all rapidly delivered, convincingly concrete, and psychologically persuasive . . . Hermans knows life intimately and that his knowledge is devastating."
—Tim Parks, New York Review of Books


"What’s most interesting, and what connects this novel with [Hermans's] others set in wartime—A Guardian Angel Recalls and The Darkroom of Damocles—are questions of identity, authenticity, and duplicity. As these novels chart the ways in which warfare can deform and degrade us, they measure the gap between their characters’ true inner selves and the false identities they assume: the roles they play and the lies they tell. And all three books monitor the terrifying ease with which that gap can narrow."
—Francine Prose, Harper's

"Profoundly unsettling . . . haunt[s] the mind for long afterwards."
The Sunday Times, A Book of the Year

"Those who do simply open and read will find themselves immersed in a nightmare miniature where philosophical musing gives seamless way to beautiful but unyielding cruelty . . . this newer translation by David Colmer seems to better capture the unsettling horror."
—Ben Murphy, Full Stop

"Although An Untouched House is brief, it is worth pacing oneself and absorbing its remarkable density. Hermans’ is the architect of a masterful story—concise but expansive in vision...a lucid, exhilarating account."
—Peyton Harvey, Zyzzyva

"Hermans’s novella is a bleak depiction of the absurdity of war, which knows no winners."
—Felix Haas, World Literature Today

"A shocking Dutch classic . . . remarkable . . . It takes an hour or two to read, but An Untouched House is the kind of book that stays with you forever."
The Guardian

"From the opening pages, the translator David Colmer brilliantly evokes the laconic tone of a narrator who proves intelligent, resourceful and increasingly deranged . . . By any light, this eloquent marvel teases, bewilders and unnerves."
Times Literary Supplement

"This novella is a fascinating portrait of a solipsistic mind, a scrupulous rendering of the erosion of human empathy that resonates in these uncivil times."
—Christopher Byrd, Vulture

‘I was struck by the compressed farce and horror in the 1951 Dutch novella An Untouched House.’
—Sam Leith, choosing An Untouched House as a Spectator Book of the Year

"Taut . . . dark, thrillerish."
New Statesman

"As disturbing and powerful as anything by Joseph Heller or Kurt Vonnegut."
—Michel Faber

"Hermans is as alarming as a snake in the bread bin . . . hugely entertaining."
The Scotsman

An Untouched House

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£11.69

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RRP £12.99 – you save £1.30 (10%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 7 Jan 2026.

A Paperback / softback by Willem Frederik Hermans, David Colmer, Cees Nooteboom

10 in stock


    View other formats and editions of An Untouched House by Willem Frederik Hermans

    Publisher: Archipelago Books
    Publication Date: 23/10/2018
    ISBN13: 9781939810069, 978-1939810069
    ISBN10: 193981006X

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    A brooding meditation on violence by a classic post-war Dutch writer who has drawn comparisons to Joseph Heller and Kurt Vonnegut. An Untouched House is a mesmerising, dark meditation on the legacy of war. An interloper and opportunist makes a grand house his own in the chaos of a war-torn countryside, only to find himself involved with occupying forces and enraged locals.

    Trade Review
    One of Ian McEwan’s “most underrated books”

    "Two contrasting energies galvanize Hermans’s fictions. The wry invitation to find symbols and deeper meanings is balanced by a wealth of detail and meticulously described action, all rapidly delivered, convincingly concrete, and psychologically persuasive . . . Hermans knows life intimately and that his knowledge is devastating."
    —Tim Parks, New York Review of Books


    "What’s most interesting, and what connects this novel with [Hermans's] others set in wartime—A Guardian Angel Recalls and The Darkroom of Damocles—are questions of identity, authenticity, and duplicity. As these novels chart the ways in which warfare can deform and degrade us, they measure the gap between their characters’ true inner selves and the false identities they assume: the roles they play and the lies they tell. And all three books monitor the terrifying ease with which that gap can narrow."
    —Francine Prose, Harper's

    "Profoundly unsettling . . . haunt[s] the mind for long afterwards."
    The Sunday Times, A Book of the Year

    "Those who do simply open and read will find themselves immersed in a nightmare miniature where philosophical musing gives seamless way to beautiful but unyielding cruelty . . . this newer translation by David Colmer seems to better capture the unsettling horror."
    —Ben Murphy, Full Stop

    "Although An Untouched House is brief, it is worth pacing oneself and absorbing its remarkable density. Hermans’ is the architect of a masterful story—concise but expansive in vision...a lucid, exhilarating account."
    —Peyton Harvey, Zyzzyva

    "Hermans’s novella is a bleak depiction of the absurdity of war, which knows no winners."
    —Felix Haas, World Literature Today

    "A shocking Dutch classic . . . remarkable . . . It takes an hour or two to read, but An Untouched House is the kind of book that stays with you forever."
    The Guardian

    "From the opening pages, the translator David Colmer brilliantly evokes the laconic tone of a narrator who proves intelligent, resourceful and increasingly deranged . . . By any light, this eloquent marvel teases, bewilders and unnerves."
    Times Literary Supplement

    "This novella is a fascinating portrait of a solipsistic mind, a scrupulous rendering of the erosion of human empathy that resonates in these uncivil times."
    —Christopher Byrd, Vulture

    ‘I was struck by the compressed farce and horror in the 1951 Dutch novella An Untouched House.’
    —Sam Leith, choosing An Untouched House as a Spectator Book of the Year

    "Taut . . . dark, thrillerish."
    New Statesman

    "As disturbing and powerful as anything by Joseph Heller or Kurt Vonnegut."
    —Michel Faber

    "Hermans is as alarming as a snake in the bread bin . . . hugely entertaining."
    The Scotsman

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