Thomas Olde Heuvelt

Thomas Olde Heuvelt (born 16 April 1983) is a Dutch horror writer. His short stories have received the Hugo Award for Best Novelette, the Dutch Paul Harland Prize, and have been nominated for two additional Hugo Awards and a World Fantasy Award.

Early life and influences
Olde Heuvelt was born in Nijmegen, Netherlands. He studied English and American literature at the Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen and at the University of Ottawa in Canada, where he lived for half a year. In many interviews, he recalls that the literary heroes of his childhood were Roald Dahl and Stephen King, who created in him a love for grim and dark fiction. He later discovered the works of a wider range of contemporary writers such as Jonathan Safran Foer, Carlos Ruiz Zafón, Neil Gaiman, and Yann Martel, whom he calls his greatest influences.

Career
Olde Heuvelt wrote his debut novel, De Onvoorziene, at the age of nineteen. It was published with a small printing in 2002 and followed in 2004 by PhantasAmnesia, a 600-page novel in which the author combined horror with humor and satire. Since 2008, his novels have been published by major Dutch publishing house Luitingh-Sijthoff.

Olde Heuvelt is a multiple winner of the Paul Harland Prize for best Dutch work of fantastic fiction (2009 and 2012). Translated into English, his short story "The Boy Who Cast No Shadow", published by PS Publishing in the UK, was nominated for the Science Fiction & Fantasy Translation Awards in 2012. The same story was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novelette in 2013.

In April 2013, Tor Books released his story "The Ink Readers of Doi Saket" as an e-book. It would be nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Short Story and the World Fantasy Award—Short Fiction in 2014.

Olde Heuvelt's story "The Day the World Turned Upside Down", published in Lightspeed, won the Hugo Award for Best Novelette in 2015.

In 2016, Olde Heuvelt's worldwide debut novel HEX was published in the US by Tor Books and in the UK and Australia by Hodder & Stoughton. Horror novelist Stephen King tweeted about the book, calling it "totally, brilliantly original". The publication was followed by a six-week book tour through the US.

Heuvelt's newest English-language book, Echo, was published by Tor Books in February 2022. His latest Dutch work is Orakel.

Honors

 * 2005 Paul Harland Prize (Debut Prize) for "De kronieken van een weduwnaar"
 * 2009 Paul Harland Prize (Winner) for "The Boy Who Cast No Shadow" (Dutch version)
 * 2012 Paul Harland Prize (Winner) for Fishbowl Universe (Dutch version)
 * 2012 Science Fiction & Fantasy Translation Awards (Honorable Mention, together with Carlos Ruiz Zafón) for "The Boy Who Cast No Shadow" (US)
 * 2013 Hugo Award for Best Novelette (Nomination) for "The Boy Who Cast No Shadow"
 * 2014 Hugo Award for Best Short Story (Nomination) for "The Ink Readers of Doi Saket"
 * 2014 World Fantasy Award—Short Fiction (Nomination) for "The Ink Readers of Doi Saket"
 * 2015 Hugo Award for Best Novelette (winner) for "The Day the World Turned Upside Down"

==Bibliography ==

Novels

 * De Onvoorziene (Intes International) (2002)
 * PhantasAmnesia (Intes International) (2004)
 * Leerling Tovenaar Vader & Zoon (Luitingh-Sijthoff) (2008)
 * Harten Sara (Luitingh-Sijthoff) (2011)
 * HEX (Hodder & Stoughton, UK; Tor Books, US) (2016)
 * Echo (Luitingh-Sijthoff) (2019)

Short story collections

 * Om nooit te vergeten (Luitingh-Sijthoff) (2017)

Short stories

 * "De Bank en het sterrenlicht" (2006)
 * "De Koperen Krokodil" (2006)
 * "Tulpen en windmolens in het Land van de Champignons" (2006)
 * "De Kronieken van een Weduwnaar" (2008)
 * "Harlequin on Dam Square" (Oxygen Books, UK) (2010)
 * "Alles van Waarde is Weerloos" (2010)
 * "Balora met het grote hoofd" (2012)
 * "The Boy Who Cast No Shadow" (PS Publishing, UK) (2012)
 * "The Ink Readers of Doi Saket" (Tor Books, US) (2013)
 * "The Day the World Turned Upside Down" (Lightspeed, US; 2014)
 * "Hertenhart en Gembertimbaaltjes" (2017)
 * "You Know How the Story Goes" (Tor Books) (2017)
 * "Dolores Dolly Poppedijn" (Collectieve Propaganda van het Nederlandse Boek) (2019)