“We discovered that what young men offer is fleeting and slippery, and quite possibly the most glamorous adventure of all (x).
***Spoilers included***
Like many girls, the story of Peter Pan has followed me throughout my youth. I remember as a very young child being so confused by the Mary Martin version, enjoying the Disney version, absolutely loving Hook, then following the other attempts to imagine the story with limited success such as the highly unnecessary Pan and the 2003 version when Peter was decidedly a very unattractive casting. I’ve always been the “Wendy” to my guy friends’ and boyfriends’ Peter Pans and lost boys, and I even read the actual book, which I mainly remember because Peter is depicted as heartless (very accurate of children) and degrading of women (like how he completely forgot who Tinkerbell was).
As for this book, I had no clue it existed until I saw the atrocious movie version on Hulu. I was so horrified by it for several reasons (look up any of the reviews and they all sum up my own opinions), the worst of which is that Livia De Paolis was such a horrible actress and could not hide her Italian accent at all; however, the idea intrigued me and I assumed the book had to be better when, frankly, a lot of the reviewers of the film should somewhat owe De Paolis an apology. Although she was a horrible actress, the movie really is similar to the book, dialogue and all, aside from the poor special effects.
The plot centers around how generations of Darling women all disappear with Peter and then return, changed and perceived by society as unhinged until Wendy 2 (OG Wendy’s granddaughter) has a brazen, jerk of a daughter named Berry (who makes me very glad I have a so) who fails to fly away with Peter because she has no happy thoughts and it is implied it is due to generational trauma. The readers are left with the decision to believe that they all suffer from mental illness or that it actually happened.
The biggest aspect of this book that I hated is that Peter Pan is a foil for mother/daughter relationships and readers are mainly stuck with vague allusions to Hook “ravishing” girls, the lost boys whining, and Peter shunning advances. There are no adventures, just unrequited horniness from the Daring women and mostly present-day accounts of how Wendy 2 thinks her life is horrible. The most interesting part is how it is alluded to that Peter and Jane had a physical relationship, which is never explained fully. In the movie, De Paolis chose to have Wendy 2’s fantasy of hooking up with Peter attributed to Jane (and made it “real”), but in the book, it’s so vague it’s obnoxious and I wish it just wasn’t put in at all. There was also an interesting part where Peter brings a random new girl to the island and forces Wendy 2 to leave, but again, it’s not developed at all. The whole book is a murky commentary on what it is like to be a hetero female who wants to be the “one” with crushes on self-absorbed boys with some attempts at feminism thrown in with Hook sexually harassing women (and Hook had a grandson? Why isn’t that explained?!). The loose ideas were just so perplexing, like Peter suddenly somewhat aging? Was it punishment for being sexual with Jane? Who knows?! As someone who was once a hetero young girl, I wanted this to resonate with me so much, but it was too frustrating to do so even though I somewhat knew what Fox was trying (and failing) to do.
Fox’s diction was also annoying. Why refer to it as “The Neverland” and keep calling Peter “Pan” alternately? Then, the ridiculous dialogue of Berry, most notably, “Sayonara, Mu-Mu” (164), which De Paolis at least changed “Mu-Mu” to “Mama,” but was still ripped apart by critics as a horrible attempt to portray teenage jargon when it was, in fact, the idiocy of Fox.
Ultimately, it was a great idea, but executed so atrociously poorly. I liked Wendy 2 and Berry going to Disneyland to ride the Peter Pan ride ok and I think Fox depicted Peter strikingly well. In fact, he was the only interesting character aside from OG Wendy and Jane and he aligns with the original text, but he couldn’t get the rest of the book to soar. Wendy 2 was miserable and dull and I wish any other Darling woman had been the focus instead, even if Berry was insufferable as well.