Joke van Leeuwen
Deesje
In Deesje by Joke van Leeuwen you roll along with the main character from one adventure into the next. And not only as far as the story is concerned; reading the words and looking at the pictures is one big surprise. In the work of the doubly talented Van Leeuwen, text and illustrations complement each other perfectly, and humour and seriousness intermingle. The language is packed with puns and the comical black-and-white drawings are really different and also tell a story. A veritable feast for the eyes.
In a large picture-book format, the story of Deesje is told over 88 pages. All by herself, she travels to stay for a while with her half-aunt, because her father and the lady who studied child science thought it was a good idea. And, after all, Dad and her two big brothers have no time for her. During the day they’re always busy knocking together strips of wood and in the evening they watch Big Adventures from America on TV.
And with this journey begins a series of misunderstandings and adventures. Deesje can’t find her half-aunt on the packed platform and she’s taken away by the wrong lady on a bus full of children.
When they go to look round the city, they visit Escher’s house and Van Leeuwen treats her readers to truly Escheresque drawings. Deesje seizes her chance and runs away. After an eventful detour, she ends up at the house of the Gate Shutter and Tina Teen, who are really nice to her. As Naturelle Gazeuse, an expert on the universe, she goes out earning money on the streets with Tina Teen and before long she accidentally ends up on television. And, fortunately, that’s where her half-aunt finds her.
This genuinely childlike but also eccentric way of looking at the world is reminiscent of Annie M.G. Schmidt; in Van Leeuwen’s work, outsiders such as Tina Teen also come off a lot better than the people with authority.
By Dorine Louwerens
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
Deesje (1985, 88 pp)
Age: 8+

Biography
Joke van Leeuwen (1952) studied history at the University of Brussels, performs in cabaret and theatre shows, writes stories and poems for children, which she illustrates herself, and writes prose and poetry for adults. She has received innumerable awards, including the prestigious Theo Thijssen Prize, the triennial Dutch State Prize for youth literature.
In her work, Joke van Leeuwen champions the uninhibited way children look at the world, fighting against repression and narrow-mindedness. A number of stories are about a quest in various stages, such as Deesje (Dee Dee) (1985), Wijd weg (Far Away) (1991) and Iep! (Cheep!) (1996). Joke van Leeuwen demonstrates that high quality literature need not be inaccessible.
Website: www.jokevanleeuwen.com
Quotes
What would we be in the Netherlands and Flanders without Joke van Leeuwen? We have seldom seen a more creative writer and illustrator for children. Everything is just the way it has to be.
GPD
An original writer and illustrator whose talent is impossible to pin down: it is forever leaping off in a new direction, manifesting itself in ever more surprising ways.
NRC Handelsblad
Im Grunde sind alle ihre Bücher kleine Kunstwerke in Text und Bild, die preisverdächtig sind.
Süddeutsche Zeitung
Translations
- Deesje macht das schon. Weinheim etc.: Beltz & Gelberg, 1991
- [Deje datte ichininmae]. Tokyo: Fukuinkan Shoten, 1991
- Dessi. Stockholm: Berghs, 1990
- Continued...
Rights sold
- Minusa / Bir (Seoul, )
- Continued...