Presently reading the novel Publieke werken ('Public works') by Dutch author Thomas Rosenboom. It's a period piece set in the late nineteenth century and revolves around two Jewish cousins, one of which is a pharmacist in Groningen, whilst the other is a violin manufacturer in Amsterdam.
As for non-fiction, I just started in an illustrated history of the House of Orange, which is the royal family of the Netherlands. In the first chapters, I came across a picture of the tomb of René of Chalon, who was Prince of Orange in the first half of the 16th century, and his final resting place in Bar-le-Duc France has been decorated with a so-called 'transi', which is a depiction of the deceased person in the form of a decaying body. This sounds very macabre, but the sculpture is gorgeously crafted by sculptor Ligier Richier:
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clarity of thought before rashness of action