Hans Hagen

Sold (Verkocht)

Verkocht is an evocative story that can be read in two ways: as an exciting adventure set in the rugged desert of Dubai, but also as an unequivocal indictment of child slavery in the Middle East. Hans Hagen tells the tale of the four-year-old Pakistani boy Yaqub, whose parents are forced to sell him to a people smuggler.

After a frightening journey over the sea, Yaqub ends up in Dubai, where, very much against his will, he is made to work as a jockey in dangerous camel races. During the day, he learns how to ride the camels and take care of them; at night he sleeps with other young camel jockeys in a dilapidated shipping container. The children’s life is a harsh one, consisting of hunger, headaches and thirst. Fortunately, there are occasional rays of hope to keep Yaqub going. He discovers how much fun it can be to make drawings in the sand and on wood, and he takes courage from his close friendship with the other jockeys.

Philip Hopman has provided the story with understated pencil drawings that beautifully complement the sober mood of the story. Using subtle shades of grey, he sketches the slumped shoulders of Yaqub’s father as he says goodbye, the hustle and bustle of the streets of Karachi and the camels in the desolate desert, against a backdrop of electricity pylons and skyscrapers.

At the end of the book, Hans Hagen explains how he first came upon the trail of the camel jockeys during a trip to Pakistan. He read a series of short newspaper reports about the abduction of Pakistani children. Only years later, when he was visiting a racetrack in Dubai, did he realise where those children may have ended up: working as camel jockeys. After undertaking thorough research, he decided to write a book about the subject. In spite of the serious theme, Verkocht is definitely not a weighty or ponderous book. Hagen’s greatest assets are his integrity, his sense of distance and his light and vivid style. The real pain lies between the lines and is concealed within small hints, such as the golden chain that Yaqub finds in the dust, which he hangs on to with grim determination, for when he sees his mother again. What makes Verkocht such a moving book is the knowledge that this life has actually been the fate of real children.

By Annemarie Terhell

Publisher

Querido
Singel 262
NL - 1016 AC Amsterdam
TEL. +31 20 551 12 62
FAX +31 20 639 19 68
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.querido.nl


Publishing details

Verkocht (2007, 171 pp)
Illustrations: Philip Hopman
Age: 10+

Verkocht

Biography

Hans Hagen (b. 1955) likes to travel, as is evident from the subject matter of the stories that he chooses for his books. A number of these books were inspired by a visit to the Middle East. Following his adaptation of the Gilgamesh epic, he wrote about this ancient culture in among others, Het gouden oog (The Golden Eye, 1991) and De weg van de wind (The Way of The Wind, 1992). But his stories for younger children are also set in other cultures, for example De kat en de adelaar (The Cat and The Eagle, 1997). The idea for The Dance of the Drummers was formed during a trip to Ghana. Hagen’s work has regularly been awarded prizes since 1992, most recently the Golden Slate Pencil for The Dance of the Drummers and a Silver Slate Pencil in 2004 for Zwaantje en Lolly Londen.

Website: www.hanshagen.nl

Dossier

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Quotes

Hagen’s vivid language always hits the mark (…) a beautiful description of a terrible and unfamiliar world.

NRC Handelsblad

Hans Hagen really shows us what he’s capable of.

Trouw