Erwin Mortier

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Erwin Mortier (born 28 November 1965) is a Dutch-language Belgian author. Spending his youth in Hansbeke, he later moved to nearby Ghent, where he became city poet (2005–2006).<ref>Erwin Mortier wordt nieuwe stadsdichter Het Nieuwsblad 14 January 2005</ref>

He wrote as a columnist for newspapers like De Morgen and published several novels:

Collections of his poetry were published from 2001 on.

Among the literary prizes awarded to Mortier there are debut prizes in Belgium and in the Netherlands for Marcel, in 2002 the C. Buddingh' prize for his debut in poetry,<ref>Template:Usurped Poetry International Rotterdam: "2002 – Erwin Mortier met Vergeten licht"</ref> and in 2009 the AKO Literatuurprijs for While the Gods Were Sleeping.<ref name="AKO" />

Mortier came out of the closet with A plea for sinning, a collection of essays (2003).<ref>BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION: How to be as immodest as possible at {{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}</ref> Other non-fiction included Evenings on the Estate: Travelling with Gerard Reve (2007), and A farewell to Congo: Back to the equator with Jef Geeraerts (2010).

He translated war prose by Ellen N. La Motte, Mary Borden and Enid Bagnold in Dutch, and produced the first Dutch translation of Virginia Woolf's Between the Acts.

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