Jutta Chorus

Jutta Chorus (b. 1967) is a writer and journalist. She has co-written books on Pim Fortuyn’s political career, and the murder of Theo van Gogh. Her chronicle of the Rotterdam migrant neighbourhood Afri was nominated for the 2010 M.J. Brusse Prize for the best journalistic book. In 2020, she produced a documentary about Queen Beatrix, based on an earlier book.

Recent Books

Jutta Chorus

Alma's Daughters - Five Lives in the Shadowsd

In this innovative multi-biography, Jutta Chorus follows a fascinating female family line over the course of the past century and a half. The book begins in the nineteenth century with matriarch Alma and then follows the lives of Alma’s daughter Elly, her granddaughters Sylvia and Elly, and her great-granddaughter Lili. A writer, an agricultural scientist, a journalist, a photographer and a filmmaker. Had they been men, the biographer argues, they would have displayed their talents with more bravado and most likely gone down in history.

Angela Maas

The Healthcare Gap

Medicine has traditionally been based on the male body, with women as bycatch, but women are not just smaller men. In scientific research, female patients remain alarmingly underrepresented, and today there is still no equality between men and women as patients, despite growing proof of the differences. And female medical professionals themselves still need further emancipation in their roles.

Lieke Marsman

On Another Planet They Can Save Me

In 2017, poet and novelist Lieke Marsman was diagnosed with a rare type of bone cancer. After enduring various rounds of chemo, she was told her illness was terminal. Still, she is continuing with treatment – radiotherapy, immunotherapy, operations. Living for years with death has changed Lieke’s worldview, and On Another Planet They Can Save Me is a poetic and philosophical exploration of the need to embrace the unknown.

Sjeng Scheijen

Another Russia

Is Russia so unique that we can’t understand its people? Putin would like us to think so, and it’s why he has to defend against the ‘decadent West’. Meanwhile, our own stubborn myths about the enigmatic ‘Russian Soul’ only confirm his narrative. If we ever hope to see peace in Europe, renowned Russia-expert Sjeng Scheijen argues, we had better look at what we share. After all, one can’t win a war of ideas with bombs alone.

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