Two works in progress that were nearly finished at the time of Slauerhoff's death, the original novel
De opstand van Guadalajara ("The
Guadalajara Uprising") and the translation of
Martín Luis Guzmán's novel
In de schaduw van den leider ("In the Shadow of the Leader"), were published
posthumously in 1937. A Committee for the Preparation of Slauerhoff's Complete Works was put together and convened to compile his
Complete Works. This committee, which consisted of leading literary figures, among which a number of friends of Slauerhoff, included
D.A.M. Binnendijk,
Menno ter Braak,
N.A. Donkersloot,
J. Greshoff,
Kees Lekkerkerker,
Hendrik Marsman,
Adriaan Roland Holst, and
Constant van Wessem. Du Perron contributed a general outline for the ordering and grouping of the contents, but declined to participate further. Work progressed slowly and was further slowed down by the events of
World War II. The first volume appeared in 1941, one year behind schedule, and the series of eight volumes was not completed until 1958. Two of the committee's members, Ter Braak and Marsman, died at the start of the war and the publisher,
Nijgh & Van Ditmar, lost faith halfway through the project, which resulted in the intended separate volume of
critical apparatus being scrapped and the last volume, containing Slauerhoff's essays, being published independently by Lekkerkerker. Lekkerkerker, ever the dedicated text researcher and caretaker of Slauerhoff's literary heritage, continued over the years to unearth and study Slauerhoff's
manuscripts and uncollected publications, resulting in ever better versions of the
Complete Poems and
Complete Prose volumes. In 2018 a revised complete edition of all his poems was published. Wim Hazeu, one of the main biographers of the Netherlands, published a revised edition of his Slauerhoff biography that same year. Slauerhoff's 1934 novel,
Het leven op aarde, was republished by Handheld Press in a new English translation by David McKay as
Adrift in the Middle Kingdom in 2019. ==Bibliography==