Sjoerd Kuyper & Daan Remmerts de Vries

Sjaantje Plays Let’s Pretend (Sjaantje doet alsof)

Sjaantje doet alsof by Sjoerd Kuyper and the multi-talented Daan Remmerts de Vries is a very colourful picture book, both literally and figuratively, and it may be classified within the genre of the ‘consolation fantasy’: in order to make life bearable, a young child unconsciously imagines a life peopled with characters who don’t exist or with loved ones who are no longer there.

Little Sjaantje is precisely this kind of imaginative dreamer. All she needs to play her ‘let’s pretend’ game is the empty biscuit barrel at her grandma’s house. The biscuit barrel urgently needs to be filled. And so Sjaantje sinks deep into her grandma’s blue-checked armchair and dreams away – until her grandpa flies in through the window and takes her off to buy ‘a hundred million new let’s-pretend biscuits’. This happy imaginary shopping adventure ends when Grandma comes into the living room. Sjaantje tells her that she has been able to buy new biscuits, because she’s been ‘pretending that Grandpa’s still alive’, which comes as a surprise to the reader.

In spite of the emotional issue of a dead grandpa, this story by Kuyper and Remmerts de Vries is by no means a gloomy one. They convincingly demonstrate that humour does not have to come at the expense of integrity and sincerity, and provide a perfect illustration of how young children can handle grief in a playful way, without losing their cheerful natures.

Remmerts de Vries has given Sjaantje a happy, cheeky little face. And by depicting Sjaantje’s memory of Grandpa as a lanky, clown-like man, he emphasises their close and fun-filled relationship in a simple and effective way.

Remmerts de Vries’ lavish, lively collages, made up of wallpaper, printed fabrics and a great deal of colour, are a perfect complement to this light-hearted story with a serious undertone. The window through which we see Grandpa coming and going is beautiful, as is Grandma when she eats a ‘let’s-pretend biscuit’ with Sjaantje at the end of the story. Another beautiful feature of the book is Kuyper’s text, which is simple, yet sometimes slightly ambiguous, and gives the pictures all the space they need to relate Sjaantje’s imaginative tale: a wonderfully honest consolation fantasy for children.

By Mirjam Noorduijn.

Publisher

Nieuw Amsterdam
Jan Luijkenstraat 16
1071 CN Amsterdam
TEL. +31 20 570 61 00
FAX +31 20 570 61 99
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.nieuwamsterdam.nl


Publishing details

Sjaantje doet alsof (2007, 28 pp)
Age: 4+

Sjaantje doet alsof

Biographies

After leaving school Sjoerd Kuyper (1952) studied philosophy for a few years and made his writing debut in 1974 with a collection of poems for adults. He wrote various stories for television, among them Majesteit, Uw ontbijt (‘Your Breakfast, Sire’) and Het zakmes (‘The Pocket Knife’) which was also filmed and received fourteen awards, among them an Emmy. In 1994 he won a Silver Slate Pencil for Robin en Suze (‘Robin And Suze’), in 1995 he won another for Het eiland Klaasje (‘The Isle of Klaasje’). He is, he thinks, a writer who writes mostly about what he thinks, fears, feels, more than about what he himself has experienced. Kuyper writes in a style that is poetic, clear and vivid and enters with ease into the emotional world of young children.

Website: http://www.sjoerdkuyper.com

Daan Remmerts de Vries (b. 1962) is one of the Netherlands’ unusually versatile writer/illustrators. His keyword is originality, and he has worked within all kinds of genres, using both words and pictures to create books for young and old. Typical features of his work are his sensitive child characters, his vibrant narrative voice and his fanciful collages. He has won Gouden and Zilveren Griffels (Godje; De Noordenwindheks) and Vlag en Wimpel awards from the Griffel and Penseel panels.

Quotes

Beautiful, dream-like illustrations.

Vrij Nederland

A cheerful book about a difficult theme.

Leesgoed