A review by miss_h
Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie

5.0

I don’t know how to feel right now. I think I feel sad. Yes, that’s it.

Before I get to why it makes me sad in a bittesweet way, I want to say that this book is significantly darker that Disney’s movie. I mean, Peter kills the Lost Boys when they get to old, and the narrorator decided to kill a pirate just to demonstrate Hook’s method.

But death is just mentioned so carelessly. It will comment that someone died, and then move on.

Example:
‘The boys on the island vary, of course, in numbers, according as they get killed and so on; and when they seem to be growing up, which is against the rules, Peter thins them out; but at this time there were six of them, counting the twins as two.’

But it is the end that is more or less sad.

In the end, Wendy, John, and Michael return to the Darlings for a heartfelt reunion. Mr. and Mrs. Darling also adopt all six of the Lost Boys; rhis is also fine. What wasn’t fine was that Peter looked in through a barred window onto something tht he would never have, and when Mrs. Darling invited him in, he refused. He refused to grow up.

He left to live with Tink, who soon died and was forgotten by Peter, as was Hook, and oftentimes he also forgot to return for Wendy in the Spring, when she was allowed to go away with him. So Peter has forgotten this entire adventure.

Soon, the Lost Boys regret their decision to live in the real world, and tried to fly away, but they were tied to their bedposts. Their belief soon vanished and they were gone.

The author referred to the adult versions of the Lost Boys and John and Michael as completely other people. A judge who used to be Tootles, a man who had used to be John, as is they were no longer themselves. And, I suppose, they weren’t. They had died.

It was only Wendy who remembered, and who told the story of her adventures with Peter to her daughter. One day Peter comes to take Wendy away in the Spring, but she is all grown up. She leaves in distress when he begins crying, and Jane wakes up. Mimicing her mother’s exact words, she says, “Boy, Why are you crying?” Soon she is up and flying around the room, and Peter takes her away for Spring cleaning. And so it continues with Jane’s daughter Margaret, and Margaret’s daughter, and so on.

But Peter? I doubt that Peter even remembers.

Also, there are things in this book that are never quite explained. Like this concept here:

Mrs. Darling has many kisses on her mouth, but there is one in the corner of it that nobody can ever quite reach. The kiss is similar in many ways to Peter.

And that is what many things in the book are like. They aren’t fully explained and it leaves room to wonder.

These unexplained parts create a beautiful, mysterious air to the story.

I loved this book. I want to re-read it immediately.