Peter Pan originally appeared as a baby living a magical life among birds and fairies in J. M. Barrie’s sequence of stories Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens. His later role as flying boy hero of Neverland was brought to the stage in Barrie’s play Peter Pan (1904), which was transformed into the novel Peter and Wendy in 1911. In a narrative filled with vivid characters, epic battles, pirates, fairies, and fantastic imagination, Peter Pan’s adventures capture the spirit of childhood and of rebellion against the role of adulthood in conventional society.
This edition includes the novel and the stories and reproduces the original illustrations by Francis Donkin Bradford and Arthur Rackham. In his Introduction, Jack Zipes sifts through the psychological interpretations that have engaged critics, explores the cultural and literary contexts in which we can appreciate Barrie’s enduring creation, and shows why Peter Pan is fundamentally a work that urges adults to reconnect with their own imagination.