by J. M. Barrie
this edition designed by MinaLima
2015
I read the novel Peter Pan for the first time last
week. Finding this irresistible new
version with maps and pop-outs is what convinced me to give it a try. I’ve seen the animated Disney Peter Pan multiple times,
and I’m also familiar with the stage play.
The story was originally written as a stage play in 1904 and not until
1911 did J.M. Barrie turn it into a novel.
Both versions tell the story of Peter Pan, a mischievous boy who refuses
to grow up, Wendy Darling and her younger brothers John and Michael, and their
adventures with the Lost Boys in Neverland.
What captured my attention most while reading the novel is
the extra insight we get into the character of Tinker Bell. In the play and movie, Tinker Bell’s voice is
a delicate little bell ringing. In the
book, however, we get to hear the words she is saying, and it is often quite
snarky. In fact, her favorite insult for
Peter is, “You silly ass.” This is what
she responds to Peter when he questions why she drank the poison that was meant
for him. Peter is so self-absorbed he is
never aware of Tinker Bell’s love for him and doesn’t understand her selfless
act.
I love the explanation of the origin of fairies:
“When the first baby laughed for the first time, its laugh
broke into a thousand pieces, and they all went skipping about, and that was
the beginning of fairies.” And now each
time a baby laughs for the first time, a new fairy is born.
I also love Barrie’s reasoning behind Tinker Bell’s mood
swings. A fairy’s body is so small that
there is only room for one emotion at a time.
Thus, she is all jealousy, all anger, or all love with no capability of
tempering the emotions.
According to the story of Peter Pan, fairies cannot exist
unless people believe in them. Likewise,
people cannot fly without fairy dust. What
have I learned from reading Peter Pan?
Growing up is all well and good. Peter,
forever a boy, was selfish and lonely.
What is not good is losing your imagination. We need to find the perfect balance: Feet planted firmly on the ground, with the mind
and spirit able to soar.
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