Marjolijn Hof
Mother Number Zero (Moeder nummer nul)
When Fejzo was eight, he had to fill in the boxes on a form at school to make his family tree. There was only one box for a mother. “I’m adopted,” Fejzo told his teacher, so she allowed him to draw another box for his other mother. He called his biological mother “Mother 1” and his adoptive mother “Mother 2”. “I regretted it straightaway. My mum who’s my mum now had suddenly become number two. I quickly rubbed it all out and filled in the boxes again. In the first box I wrote: Mother 0.
And in the second box I put: Mother 1.” Since then – Fejzo is now three years older – he has referred to the woman who gave birth to him as “Mother Number Zero”. This wonderfully inventive phrase is reminiscent of the original twists and turns in the mind of Kiki (Kiek), the protagonist of Een kleine kans (A Small Chance), Marjolijn Hof’s debut.
Hof captures all of Fejzo’s ambivalent emotions in the name “Mother Number Zero”: he wants to be fair to both mothers, without denying that one of them is just a little more important than the other. Zero comes before one, but one is something and zero is nothing. Fortunately, Hof doesn’t feel the need to explain this to the reader. She does, however, point out that Fejzo prefers not to use the term “biological mother”, because it reminds him of washing powder. Hof’s sense of humour ensures that the story has a cheerful atmosphere.
What Fejzo likes doing best of all is sitting on a bench in the park drawing birds. One day, he meets Maud in the park. This encounter seems a little manufactured, as though it’s designed with the aim of setting the main narrative in motion: another precocious child who likes sitting in the park by herself strikes up a conversation with Fejzo and her questions get him thinking about his unusual past. Hof could perhaps have thought this scenario through a little more carefully. However, what comes next is both plausible and easy to identify with: following his conversation with Maud, Fejzo starts to wonder whether he inherited his talent for drawing from Mother Number Zero. He decides to look for her, but he’s not entirely sure that he wants to find her. She might be a drunkard or she might suddenly decide that she wants to have him back! Although the book is not an autobiography, Marjolijn Hof based her story on her own experiences as an adopted child. This can be seen in the great precision with which she sketches Fejzo’s inner development and thought processes. Rather than making Fejzo’s tale a sensational story with a spectacular finish, Hof keeps it wonderfully small and detailed.
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
Moeder nummer nul (2008, 127 pp)
Age: 10+

Biography
‘Becoming a writer was my dream,’ says Marjolijn Hof (b. 1956) on her website. But she was not sure how to make that dream come true. She became a librarian specialising in books for children and young adults, but kept on dreaming. About wonderful children’s books with no age limit. Until 1999. Then she decided to take up writing as a profession. With astounding results – rarely has a new name entered the world of Dutch children’s literature at such a high level. ‘A breath of fresh air’, ‘a surprising new voice’: these were some of the opinions expressed after the publication of Hof’s Een kleine kans (her first 9+ book). In 2007, this resulted in recognition in the form of three major prizes when she won the Gouden Uil Jeugdliteratuurprijs, the Gouden Uil Prijs van de Jonge Lezer and the Gouden Griffel. Hof’s second book Oversteken (Crossing Over) was also well received and has been translated into German, French and Japanese.
Website: www.marjolijnhof.nl
Quotes
precise, subtle and yet still accessible […] This touching novel is even better than Hof’s Gouden Griffel winner Een kleine kans.
Kidsweek
magnificent […] An original and captivating story about adoption.
Algemeen dagblad
Translations
- Mutter Nummer Null. Berlin: Berlin Verlag, Bloomsbury, 2009
- Ma mère zéro. Paris: Seuil, 2010
- Mama številka nič. Dob pri Domžalah: Miš Zalozba, 2009
- Continued...
Rights sold
- Cruïlla (Barcelona, Spanje)
- Continued...