Wim Hofman
The Travels of King Wikkepokluk (Koning Wikkepokluk de merkwaardige zoekt een rijk)
Packed with puns and humour
This book is considered to be Hofman’s most typical and personal work. The author received a Dutch Gouden Penseel award for the illustrations. The precise pen drawings reflect the essence of the story: a combination of absurdity and desolation.
Followed by three loyal subjects, King Wikkepokluk is seeking a place where he can reign in peace. They end up on an uninhabited island, in a devastated city, a den of thieves and almost in the mouth of a dragon. The royal ambitions are not great. Wikkepokluk would be happy in a tree – but all the trees are already full of kings – in a house without a roof, without walls or a floor or in a dingy prison cell. Finally, he finds his kingdom in a chest. ‘And if no one has opened the chest, then he is still there to this day’.
In addition to this familiar ending and the opening sentence – ‘Once upon a time there was a king who lived in a beast’ – there are other references to fairytales. There is a difficult task to perform before he can marry the queen, and a thousand-year old man who is the source of all wisdom. The surrealistic and sometimes oppressive character, on the other hand, is entirely un-fairytale-like. Hieronymus Bosch figures pop up and in innumerable boxes live an equal number of bizarre creatures, which Wikkepokluk sets free, as if performing a pale imitation of the Creation. Unlike most fairytale writers, Hofman also amuses himself with plays on words and in embellishing his strange tale with surprising gems.
The author claims to have been influenced by James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake and Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi. Some readers will recognise the symbolism of a pointless existence, which – whatever we do – ends up in a wooden box. Others will primarily find pleasure in the incoherent series of events in which a major Hofman adage can clearly be seen: ‘Anything can happen on paper, like in your head’.
Publisher
Van Holkema & Warendorf
P.O. Box 97
NL - 3990 DB Houten
TEL. +31 30 637 76 60
FAX +31 30 637 76 60
Website: www.unieboek.nl
Publishing details
Koning Wikkepokluk de merkwaardige zoekt een rijk (1973, 134 pp)

Biography
Wim Hofman (b. 1941) developed into an original artist for children, finding his inspiration in the language, forms and colours of the Cobra movement. De kleine Hofman (The Little Hofman, 1990) offers an encyclopedic overview of his drawing techniques and poetic narrative skill. Straf en andere verhalen (A Good Hiding and Other Stories, 1991) demonstrate his concern about the powerlessness children can suffer from, whereas books like Koning Wikkepokluk de merkwaardige zoekt een rijk (King Wikkepokluk the Remarkable Seeks a Kingdom, 1973) and Uk en Bur (Uk and Bur, 1990) exude the spontaneity and absurdity of children’s fantasy. Hofman has been awarded Golden and Silver Pencils and Paint Brushes; in 1991 he received the Theo Thijssen Prize for his entire oeuvre. Zwart als inkt won him the prestigious Woutertje Pieterse Prize.
Quotes
“A story packed with puns and delightful humor.”
― Fries Dagblad
“An imaginative and very funny story.”
― NRC Handelsblad
“People who take note of the remarkably deft and expressive use of language, the rich vocabulary, the momentum and movement of words will agree with me that Wim Hofman is a writer to watch.”
― Hervormd Nederland
Category
Genre: children’s books
Translations
- König Wikkepok. München: Middelhauve, 1998
- Continued...