Bosch & Keuning was founded in 1925 when the name of Christian publisher E.J. Bosch J.Bzn was coupled with that of his companion Pieter Keuning. In 1997 the graphical activities were split from Bosch & Keuning, after which the company expanded as a publisher. In 1999 Veen Uitgevers Groep spun off from publishing group
Wolters Kluwer. Veen referred to L.J. Veen, founder of one of the units, founded in 1887. In the Spring of 2001 Veen and Bosch & Keuning merged into Veen Bosch & Keuning. The
Noordelijke Dagblad Combinatie merged in March 2005 with Veen Bosch & Keuning to form NDC|VBK.
ThiemeMeulenhoff was also part of the media conglomerate. On 1 June 2007, the NDC Mediagroep was established as the subsidiary of NDC|VDK that would handle interests in periodicals, radio and TV. The group's interest in radio and TV was temporary. In late 2012 the VBK and ThiemeMeulenhoff book publication activities were spun off. As a result, the NDC|VBK became obsolete and VBK, ThiemeMeulenhoff,
NDC Mediagroep became independent companies again. In December 2017 Veen Bosch & Keuning acquired
Bruna. In 2019, it sold Bruna to the
Audax Groep, who already owned AKO, Bruna's main competitor. In May 2024, Simon & Schuster acquired Veen Bosch & Keuning. The acquisition includes all of VBK's imprints in the Netherlands and Belgium, as well as its sister companies, the audiobook producer Thinium, and Bookchoice, a subscription-based platform for e-books and audiobooks. This is the first expansion of Simon & Schuster into a non-English market. In November of the same year, VBK announced plans to use artificial intelligence to translation ten non-fiction titles into English. The news prompted immediate pushback from industry organizations, including the
PEN America Translation Committee, the
Society of Authors, and
The Authors Guild. == Subsidiaries ==