Leo Vroman


Leo Vroman was a Dutch-American hematologist, a prolific poet mainly in Dutch and an illustrator.

Life and work

Vroman, who was Jewish, was born in Gouda and studied biology in Utrecht. When the Nazis occupied the Netherlands on May 10, 1940, he fled to London, and from there he traveled to the Dutch East Indies. He finished his studies in Batavia. After the Japanese occupied Indonesia he was interned and stayed in several prisoner-of-war camps. In the camp Tjimahi he befriended the authors Tjalie Robinson and Rob Nieuwenhuys.
His uncle was the physician and medical researcher Isidore Snapper, who worked in New York City after emigrating from the Netherlands. After the war, Vroman went to the United States to work in New York as a hematology researcher. He gained American citizenship and lived in Fort Worth until his death in 2014, aged 98.
In 1946, he published his first poems in the Netherlands, and since then has won almost every Dutch literary poetry prize possible. In 1970 Vroman was awarded the Individual Science Award by Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. In 2003, his former high school, de Goudse ScholenGemeenschap, changed its name into de Goudse ScholenGemeenschap Leo Vroman.
He was engaged to Georgine Marie Sanders from May 1940 until their marriage in September 1947. They had two daughters.

Poetry

In English

Poems in English Just one more world
  • ''Love, greatly enlarged ''

Scientific work

E.g.,Surface contact and thromboplastin formation .Blood, Garden City, N.Y. : Published for the American Museum of Natural History, Natural History Press, 1967.