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Un clásico de todos los tiempos: la historia del niño que no quiere crecer ni hacerse mayor, pero busca en Wendy la madre que no tiene; con ella y con otros niños que viven en el hueco de los árboles del país de Nunca Jamás, viven multitud de aventuras, entre otras la batalla contra el capitán Garfio y su banda de piratas. "Todos los niños menos uno, crecen. Muy pronto saben que crecerán, y Wendy no fue una excepción. Un día, cuando contaba con dos años de edad y jugaba en el jardín, arrancó otra flor y corrió con ella hacia su madre. Supongo que debía estar encantadora, porque la señora Darling se llevó la mano en el pecho y exclamó: "Ojalá pudieras quedarte así para siempre!". Esto es todo lo que ocurrió entre ellas acerca del tema, aunque desde entonces Wendy supo que tenía que crecer. Siempre lo sabes después de cumplir dos años. Dos es el principio del fin."
The adventures of the three Darling children in Never-Never Land with Peter Pan, the boy who would not grow up. Illustrations compiled from late nineteenth and early twentieth century editions of the book.
Excerpted from Peter Pan by Barrie, J. M. Copyright © 2003 by Barrie, J. M.. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
| Foreword | xi | |
| 1 | Peter Breaks Through | 1 |
| 2 | The Shadow | 14 |
| 3 | Come Away, Come Away! | 28 |
| 4 | The Flight | 49 |
| 5 | The Island Come True | 64 |
| 6 | The Little House | 81 |
| 7 | The Home Under the Ground | 95 |
| 8 | The Mermaids' Lagoon | 105 |
| 9 | The Never Bird | 124 |
| 10 | The Happy Home | 130 |
| 11 | Wendy's Story | 140 |
| 12 | The Children Are Carried Off | 152 |
| 13 | Do You Believe in Fairies? | 160 |
| 14 | The Pirate Ship | 173 |
| 15 | "Hook or Me This Time" | 184 |
| 16 | The Return Home | 199 |
| 17 | When Wendy Grew Up | 212 |
Anonymous
Posted April 14, 2008
This book review is about a fantasy book with a theme of ¿Live and love life while you can.¿ Can you guess what the book is yet? Well, it is Peter Pan written by J.M. Barrie, illustrated by Nora Unwin. The characters in this book are very complex, but good for readers ages 10-12 to read because the characters are still understandable. Major characters in the book are the brave Peter Pan, the loving Wendy, the helpful Tinkerbell, and the two fearless little brothers of Wendy 'John and Michael'. Last of all, there is the dreadful Captain Hook. Wendy, John and Michael fly with Peter to Neverland, the home of the lost boys whose mothers left them. Captain Hook has a hook instead of a hand thanks to Peter Pan who cut it off. Peter describes Neverland as his home and he loves it. He loves it even though there is people getting prosecuted everyday. He describes it as his peaceful place to go. Wendy, the first girl ever to be to Neverland, pretends to be Peter and his little friends¿ mother. Peter was gone while Wendy gets shot by an arrow from Peter¿s friend who thought she was a bird because birds are called Wendys in Neverland. Peter comes back and sees she is unconscious. While she is unconscious Wendy talks. She says to build a small house around her or she will die. Everyone helps Peter build a house and Wendy becomes conscious. Toward the end of the book, Captain Hook comes while Peter is taking a nap. Hook and his helpers get everyone except Peter, bring them to their boat and tie them up. Instead of bringing Peter, Hook poisons the medicine that Peter has to take. Hook is trying to kill Peter. When Peter wakes up, he is about to take his medicine but Tinkerbell jumps in front of the cup and she drinks it. She tells him she will die now, but Peter tells the readers to clap their hands if they believe in fairies. The clapping makes her better. I love that part in the book. Peter runs to Captain Hook¿s ship, and saves everyone tied up. He brings Wendy, John, and Michael home to their house in the real world. Wendy¿s mother tells Wendy that she can only go to Peter¿s house in Neverland once a week in the spring to do Spring cleaning. Soon enough, Wendy grows up, gets married, and has her own daughter. Wendy¿s daughter goes to Neverland with Peter. She grows up, has a kid and her kid goes to Neverland, and so forth. Peter never grows up. J.M. Barrie was the 9th of 10 children, born in Lowland Village, Kirriemuer. At the age of seven, his brother died. This brother was his mom¿s favorite child. In honor of his brother, he took his dead brother¿s clothes, and wore them for his mom. His mom and he then developed a great relationship. At the age of 13, J.M. moved away from his home village. He went to school and became interested in theatre and devoured works. He went to college at Dumfries Academy at the University of Edinburgh, receiving his M.A. in 1882. He then became a journalist, but with empty pockets, he moved to London and became a freelance writer. I think the death of his brother was a very important part in the book Peter Pan. He probably wrote it for him or it reminded him of his brother. Maybe Peter Pan was a lot like J.M.¿s brother and that why he chose to write this book. The setting might of also reminded him of his home. He said he loved Neverland and everything there which he might of thought was like home. ¿Live and love life while you can¿ is a great theme for this book because it tells everyone to have fun while they are young. You are less capable when you are older of doing things in this book such as flying. Enjoy life every time you have the chance because you only live so long. I would definitely recommend that you read this book, especially to little kids if they can not read. It is full of adventures and action for little kids. It also has very good kid fantasy such as flying away to magical places- all a kid would ever want to do. It also has quotes like ¿You silly ass,¿ and ¿Every time a
7 out of 8 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 13, 2008
Peter Pan. Peter Pan is an exiting fantasy book about a young man Names Peter who finds a your girl named Wendy and her brothers named John and others who have fun adventures together. The beginning of the book was ok I particularly liked the part where they flew off into the night and to the neverlands. The book got better as it moved along like when captain hook and pan got into the fight. That by far was the climax of the story but when Pan had to catch wendy from falling off the blank that was ok. I didn¿t like the part when they were at the indians though for some reason I found it boring. Another part I found boring was when peter and Wendy got into a fight and they wouldn¿t talk to each other. I thought this book was fairly good. I thought there could be some more action in this book. I like the way the author put this book in its order because it made it easier to read. The setting is first in a urban apartment until Peter Pan came and took them away to the Neverlands. When they got there it was very wooded and they had lots of fun. The author J.M Barrie was a man who didn't want to grow up. So i¿m assuming that the reason he wrote this book is because he was very childish and wrote books in his wildest imagination. He was a nice person though. He was born on May 9, 1860 in Kirriemurir, Scotland and died on June 19,. 1937 in London, England. He had a wife named Mary Ansell '1894-1909'. He also had a son named Liewelyn Davies. He is notable for his book: ¿The Little White Bird¿ . One of the parts that was kinda boring but got kinda exiting as when they went to the indians place and they were smoking and when they got dancing it got better. Peter Pan is a very exiting book that makes you want to read more about it. I had Fun reading it and I would recommend it to people who like fantasy.
3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 29, 2007
I loved this book! After I read it, I felt like going out and having a adventure! It really makes you think about how your living life. I recommend not reading the last chapter though-it's sad.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted June 3, 2011
I am not one to enjoy some thing just because it is a classic, but this story is worthy of being a classic. J.M. Barrie eloquently transports the reader to their own Neverland. Barrie has written a timeless story that people of all ages can relate to. I mean who would not want to go to their own Neverland where you don't have to grow up and every thing is possible?
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.This is not your typical Disney version of Peter Pan. This version is actually very heart wrenching. It tells the story of Peter Pan, Tiger Lily, and the Lost Boys of course, but the Disney version only sugar coats the story where everyone lives happily ever after. This is not the case in this original tale of a boy who never grows up while everyone in the real world does. Heart breaking. Love this version, though. Everyone who is a fan of the movie, or who never wants to grow up should read this. I guarantee you wont after reading.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 4, 2010
While I am greatly ecstatic to own and read such a wonderful tale, I am greatly disappointed in the book and font size. This book is far too small to add to my library. Had i known the book would be 3.5in x 6in, with a size 8 font, I would have bought a magnifying glass; or a pair of binoculars to read the book from across the room.
The gold leaf, canvas binding, cloth bookmark, and feel of the thin paper is a wonderful touch. Though small, the illustrations are delightful and greatly detailed. Too bad the details are not fully appreciable by the book size. Classics such as this should be read and admired in "grown up" size, not hobbit size.
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.arrie, J.M. (2003). Peter Pan. New York: Aladdin Paperbacks.
0689866917
It seems with several movie versions, Hook, Finding Neverland, and the actual play, nobody could escape knowing something of the story of Peter Pan. However, it seems that only a small number of people actually read the book these days. Those that do, will discover a shockingly complicated and difficult text. Jumps in time and point of view, numerous metaphors, images, cultural and historic references and an interrupting narrator will make this a challenging read for many young readers.
Plus Peter is really forgetful and potentially annoying.
Nonetheless, there are uses for this book and exercises that may be completed. Just don't do them with too young of a crowd. If I were to use this book in the classroom it would be with high school students. Since there are so many rich themes and metaphors and since most students are probably familiar with some version of the narrative this book could be of good use in introducing analysis and literary theory.
It is undeniable that Barrie captured a sense of magic, fun, and childhood that most children's writers cannot help but desire to equal. And because of this, there are great fun exercises that can be done, such as having children create or draw their own maps of Neverland. Since the book is also a play, it lends itself to being reenacted. This could help with visualization.
Also, a special note if teachers use the edition of the book forwarded by author Susan Cooper-Her comments would influence anyone's reading of the text. For me, most striking is the delicate description of Barrie as "yearning for little-boy love" (p. XVI).
Activities to do with the book:
Have students create their own Neverlands, analyze the book's literary themes, enact scenes, research Barrie's life, discuss the imagination and separation between reality and fantasy, consider issues of power and the conditions of motherhood, the construction of masculinity and femininity etc.
Students could also discuss the many reinterpretations and sequels to the narrative.
Favorite Quotes:
"All children, except one, grow up" (p. 1).
"To die will be an awfully big adventure" (p. 123).
"I'm youth, I'm joy" (p. 195).
FOR MORE OF MY CHILDREN'S BOOK REVIEWS SEE http://sjkessel.blogspot.com/
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 8, 2009
I Also Recommend:
Peter Pan
I read a book called Peter Pan by the author named James Matthew Barrie. This book in an amazing book to dive in for an adventure. The book is full of magic and fantasy. You will get swept of your feet while reading this book. This book is set during the early 1900¿s with a family named The Darling¿s. In the story the family members are Mr. and Mrs. Darling, Wendy, John and Michael. Another character that is important in the book is Peter pan of course, he can be categorized the main character of the whole story. This book was inspired by author¿s older brother dying when he was only fourteen year old. The author¿s mother said that since he never got the chance to grow he will always remain a boy. The story of Peter Pan is mostly set in Neverland where Peter lives. Neverland is a magical world where fairies exist and many of your dreams may come true. The book only has 197 pages to read so it¿s not too long but it¿s not too short.
If you enjoyed this book you can also read a book about fantasy written by Lewis Carroll called Alice in Wonderland.
2 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 31, 2007
Peter Pan was an exquisite story. However, the side notes kind of were dragging on, on many pages. I found there were too many of them...
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 17, 2011
The formatting with this book is terrible. The sentences are laid out in narrow columns of a single word or two, and nothing I tried to do would fix it. I wouldn't waste any money with this one!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I put this story off for a long time. I've owned the book for maybe a year, but I didn't have a desire to read it until about a month ago. And to be completely honest, my interest was piqued only when my younger sister read it first and said it was one of the best books ever written...
Now, I can completely agree. It was written beautifully, the imagery was vibrant, and the humor was impossible to miss. When I finished the last page and set the book down, all I could do was sit and stare at it for a moment, amazed at how much I had been missing out on all these years.
Could you call it inspiration? Ummm...yeah. You could say that.
Now, almost anyone on the street knows who Peter Pan is, or has at least heard the name before (either that or Tinker Bell). However, a lot of people, and I think I can safely say most, don't know the real story. Either they've heard it from their parents, siblings, friends, etc., or they've watched the Disney version. Besides me, my sister and two friends, I don't know anyone who has read the original story as James Barrie wrote it. The one that lifts you up, carries you off to Neverland, and then brings you back with a deeper understanding of what it means to enjoy your life, growing up and all.
There's one thing I must say: while the Disney version is cute, and holds to the book fairly well, what you wouldn't know is that the real story, the one that James Barrie wrote, is so so so much deeper. The book holds a story a bit darker and more realistic than the average happy fairytail. There is a very mournful undertone throughout the book that is masterfully drawn out by a man who lived, to be honest, a tragic life.
I don't want to give the wrong impression: while Peter Pan isn't quite the "happy" story we all thought it was, there are a multitude of emotions running through each letter of every page: love, joy, and hope are just the beginning. Because of this, it is one of those books that musn't be merely enjoyed. It's much too beautiful. It's different from other fairytales... It is the story of a boy who wanted to never grow up, to always have fun. It has a certain quality to it that makes one believe that it could actually happen, that it actually has happened. That Peter and Tink will someday show up within the frame of your window, ready to fly away with you and have grand adventures. And yet as the story comes to a close, even though you want it to go on forever and ever, you feel an intense satisfaction and an understanding that all children must grow up.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 12, 2011
The cover looks beautiful, but when you turn the book to the side, the pages were bound horribly. I am very dissapointed.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Peter Pan may be a children's book but I recommend it highly to anyone who feels like they need to get in touch with their imagination. Trust me, there is truth that lies in it for all ages.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted July 7, 2008
This is the absolute best faerie tale of all time. If you have not been acquainted with the story of the boy who will not grow up then you mustn't waist another moment. Neverland awaits.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted June 17, 2008
My children and I often read this book together and then watch the movie afterwards. This is the ultimate do-gooder book for any child, especially those who seem to know better than their parents.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 7, 2008
I absolutely love this book and definitely recommend it. It is so beautiful and sad! You fall in love with the characters, especially with Peter with all of his cockiness and forgetfullness. You learn more about Captain Hook, Peter Pan, and Neverland in the book than in the movie. The story is also written beautifully and is intriguing with all of its adventures and characters. However, more than that, the themes of youth and growing up are the factors that make the story so wonderful. I cried at the end of the novel because it is very touching and leaves a lasting impression on your heart.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 15, 2007
A wonderful fairytale, full of adventure. Definitely a classic which can be enjoyed by readers of all ages.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 24, 2007
I think this book is simply magical. I got sucked into it. I couldn't stop reading it! A true classic. I love how it is written. You can really understand it. I recommend it to anyone who likes fantasy, action, or anything like that.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 19, 2007
The writing and the story in Peter Pan are both wonderful, and the hardcover edition with the Gustafson illustrations is absolutely beautiful--I highly recommend it. The illustrations are just wonderful.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 31, 2006
In a world full of weak, sappy and utterly meaningless books, sometimes it's nice to sit back with a cup of tea on a rainy day and crack open your grandfather's worn copy of Peter Pan. With its whimsical heroes and frightening villians, this book is more than just a thoughtful, exciting adventure. It's a look into the Victorian world through a child's eyes. Get past the mousiness of Wendy, the arrogance of Peter and the carefree exterior of the Lost Boys and you'll find a hauntingly beautiful tale about love and how precious a life is, no matter how short it may be. I highly recommend this book!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Overview
Un clásico de todos los tiempos: la historia del niño que no quiere crecer ni hacerse mayor, pero busca en Wendy la madre que no tiene; con ella y con otros niños que viven en el hueco de los árboles del país de Nunca Jamás, viven multitud de aventuras, entre otras la batalla contra el capitán Garfio y su banda de piratas. "Todos los niños menos uno, crecen. Muy pronto saben que crecerán, y Wendy no fue una excepción. Un día, cuando contaba con dos años de edad y jugaba en el jardín, arrancó otra flor y corrió con ella hacia su madre. Supongo que debía estar encantadora, porque la señora Darling se llevó la mano en el pecho y exclamó: "Ojalá pudieras quedarte así para siempre!". Esto es ...