The Threepenny Review

Table Talk

THE BOOK begins with one of the best opening lines ever: “All children, except one, grow up.” Barrie’s wit is inexhaustibly self-referential, and when it’s not sliding into parodies of axioms or little hymns to the novel’s real hero, Mrs. Darling, it is clowning, bittersweetly, on the sidelines. His genius, like Austen’s, is disruptive. He’s the kid who gains attention by mirroring the mannerisms of the adults he finds ridiculous or merely loathsome. The under-theme of Peter Pan is that the narrator cannot understand how the child can be the father of the man and at the same time how the grown man can ever mature into something more than a child.

Peter Pan himself begins as a figure of thought in the middle of the nineteenth century, which was as preoccupied as ours with paganism. The image of Pan begins slowly to burble out of the nineteenth century until it becomes a pointer to something interesting but hard to recognize outside of its own genre. Peter Pan’s textual cousins are Dickon Sowerby, the Piper at the Gates of Dawn, even the Jimmy Gatz who becomes Jay Gatsby. He is interesting because his lineage is to our pagan past what the cardinal in the elm is to the dinosaur: a memento mori, a reduction of something once enormously significant and now irreparably diminished. He is also morally disturbing. In that great whorehouse without doors, the internet, breed hundreds of Pan-wannabes who dress up (for their web-cams) in bright green tights and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Threepenny Review

The Threepenny Review4 min read
Thanks to Our Donors
We are grateful to the following individuals, who in 2023 generously contributed to The Threepenny Review, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation. Friends of The Threepenny Review gave up to $99 each, those in The Silver Bells donated between $100 and $49
The Threepenny Review10 min read
What's So Great About a String Quartet?
Emerson String Quartet: Farewell Performance, Alice Tully Hall, New York, October 21, 2023. Danish String Quartet, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton, November 2, 2023. LET ME start by making a case for the form itself. The term is both musical and hum
The Threepenny Review1 min read
High C
This spring your whole inner life is Little Richard.You surrender to his octave-jumping high notes as he shakes out the fringes of his glittering coat. His boots glitter, too. How narrow, those feet. And those wigs! How full. “Is that your hair?” he'

Related Books & Audiobooks