49 pages • 1 hour read
Christina HenryA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Content Warning: This section discusses graphic violence and abusive relationships.
“Sometimes I thought that Peter couldn’t be hurt, and that was why he didn’t bother so much when others were, for he couldn’t understand their pain. And Peter was bound to the island in some way that the others weren’t. He understood the land, and it understood him. That was why I had grown a bit and Peter hadn’t.”
In this passage, Jamie clearly realizes that Peter is different from the other boys even though he does not yet understand the true nature of Peter’s perpetual youth, and the terrible price that must be paid to maintain it. In this early stage of the novel, his musings merely serve as foreshadowing, raising narrative questions as he speculates about Peter’s unexplained oddities. This quote foreshadows the revelation at the end of the book that Peter was made by the island and is kept alive by its magic.
“Sometimes at night, when the nightmare clung to me, I wondered if Peter’s assurances that I would never grow up were only assurances that I would die before such a thing happened. I wondered if that were better, to die before I became something withered and grey and not wanted.”
The violence and danger that the boys face on the island outweighs their protection against the aging process. Jamie reflects that dying young must be better than growing old, and this moment of contemplation therefore highlights The Tension Between Childhood and Adulthood that remains a central theme throughout the novel.
“But I was the only one who was special, truly special, for I was the first, and would be the last if it came to that. It would always be Peter and me, like we were in the beginning.”
This passage demonstrates the nature of Peter’s psychological manipulation, for by convincing Jamie that he holds a superior status to that of the other boys, Peter ensures Jamie’s loyalty over the centuries. Jamie frequently points out that he is special to Peter, and even when he starts to doubt Peter, this assurance of his specialness remains a powerful aspect of his identity; it is so important to him that it often helps him to rationalize Peter’s violent and callous actions.
“Just this once, because you’re Jamie and I can see you’re upset. But never again. If you try to take them from me, I’ll cut off your hand.”
In this moment, Peter confirms Jamie’s special place in his world even as he threatens his so-called “friend” with punishment and worse for his crime of disobedience. Faced with the realization that Jamie is a threat to his dominance, Peter only gives in to Jamie’s wishes in an attempt to maintain his control. However, his promise to cut off Jamie’s hand foreshadows the novel’s conclusion, in which he eventually does keep this promise and cuts Jamie’s hand off, thereby completing the boy’s transformation into the classic Captain Hook.
“Then he smiled, and oh, that smile. It was that smile that had stolen me away from the Other Place, the smile that made me want to do anything for him.”
Just as Jamie begins to lose all faith in Peter, Peter smiles and reminds Jamie why he came to the island in the first place. Peter’s smile is a form of strategic manipulation that is designed to pull Jamie back into his influence. Thus, his sporadic shows of favor and affection serve as classic examples of the psychological phenomenon of “love-bombing.” Faced with the possibility that Jamie will no longer follow him and supply him with the devotion he craves, Peter will do whatever it takes to regain the boy’s loyalty and love, keeping him in thrall for just a while longer.
“I felt the burn of envy deep in my chest, scorching hard enough to bring tears to my eyes. When had he learned such a thing? Why hadn’t he shared it with us? Why hadn’t he shared it with me?”
In this moment, the true depths of Peter’s treachery and deception create an unbridgeable rift in the heart of his staunchest follower. When Peter’s secret ability to fly is revealed, Jamie is furiously jealous, and this jealousy precipitates the dissolution of his belief in Peter. The scene also alludes to the fact that in the original Peter Pan, Captain Hook desperately wants to know how Peter is able to fly.
“Nip collapsed in the dirt, clawing the noose off his neck and yanking the rag from his mouth. All the other boys chorused, ‘Awwwwww,’ for Peter had spoiled their fun.”
This is a moment of extreme dissonance in the text. The sheer horror of watching young boys try to hang another child is cut by the boys’ belief that the violence is all just a fun game they are playing. The disjointed aspects of the scene therefore reveal the blurred boundaries of Reality Versus Make-Believe.
“Did you know that they think it’s some kind of spring? I don’t know where they could have gotten such a notion, but I heard some of them talking about it when I was setting the tents on fire. They think they’ll dump out their rum bottles and fill them with ‘the water of youth.’ Pirates are so stupid.”
Here, Peter alludes to the pirates’ belief in the Fountain of Youth, a mythical spring that was said to restore youth and health to anyone who drank from it. Historically, the Fountain of Youth was rumored to have been discovered in the Caribbean by Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León, but there is no historical evidence that this was ever anything but a rumor. This scene therefore invokes the common convention of pirate stories and legends, which often feature mentions of the Fountain of Youth.
“He’d heard us talk about the upcoming Battle, and how it was a fight to the death, but somehow I thought he didn’t really believe there would be a death. Until that day Sal thought it was all just in fun, for Peter said it was fun.”
This passage reveals that the newest arrivals to the island do not yet have a full appreciation for the brutality of the world in which they now find themselves. Initially believing Peter’s stories of perpetual play, Sal has not yet seen Battle and therefore believes Peter when he claims that Battle is fun. However, now that Sal has seen the horror of death and violence, the illusion of fun is shattered, and Sal sees the island for what it really is.
“I wasn’t a hero. I’d just been angry. Only I didn’t realize at the time who, exactly, I was angry with. I’d thought it was the pirates, for firing a cannonball that took away six of my mates in one fierce swipe. But it wasn’t the pirates. It was Peter.”
In this passage, Jamie’s anger focuses on its true target: Peter. The extremely violent deaths of six boys force Jamie to confront the fact that Peter has deliberately put them all in danger. Jamie’s unwillingness to blame the pirates for murdering six children is a necessary if nonsensical component to the narrative, given that he will eventually choose to join the ranks of the pirates himself.
“They weren’t forever young, unless dying when you were young kept you that way for always.”
Jamie’s revelation about Peter also makes him realize that none of the boys on the island have stayed young forever. Other than Peter, Nod, Fog, and himself, everyone else has either grown up or died. In this moment, Jamie is confronted with the grim realization that being young forever actually just means dying young.
“Was this, I wondered, what it felt like to be a grown-up? Did you always feel the weight of things on you, your cares pressing you down like a burden you could never shake? No wonder Peter could fly. He had no worries to weight him to the earth.”
Peter’s carefree nature sets him apart from the other boys, and Jamie wonders if his lack of worries enables him to fly. This comment references the original Peter Pan stories, in which Peter declares that in order to fly, one simply needs happy thoughts and fairy dust. This passage is therefore one of many examples of the balance Henry strikes between honoring the source text even as she dramatically alters its premises.
“It was like the island swallowed up that blood and pushed it out again as magic, magic that kept us boys forever. It was a fanciful thought, but no more fanciful than that of the pirates thinking we drank from some magic spring for eternal youth.”
Without realizing it, Jamie has cracked the island’s secret. Although Jamie dismisses this theory as fanciful, Peter eventually reveals that the island does in fact absorb the blood of the slaughtered boys in order to keep Peter and his loyal followers forever young. In this way, both Peter and the island are revealed to be essentially vampiric in nature, for Peter owes his very existence to the sacrifices that his followers make on his behalf. In this way, the character of Peter can be interpreted as a metaphor for the real-life concept of extreme narcissism, for just as Peter cannot survive without an endless supply of blood, a true narcissist’s self-image cannot exist without an audience to provide them with an emotional supply.
“Together wasn’t something that Peter understood, not really. He liked all the boys to be in one group, but he didn’t like sharing and he certainly didn’t like it when the boys banded together to do anything without him.”
Despite Peter’s claims that he wants to have a big group of friends to play with, his primary motivator is not having fun, but Gaining Control Over Others. In situations in which he is not the sole focus of love and adoration, he becomes petulant and unhappy. Without the constant attention and adoration of his followers, he finds himself without a purpose. Threatened by their lack of attention, he often resorts to extreme measures to return himself to the central role in their interactions.
“‘How could he be from the island?’ I asked. ‘Did he sprout out of the ground like a mushroom? Where are his parents?’
Sal shook her head. ‘I don’t know. But he’s not like other boys. There’s something different about him.’”
With this statement, Sal voices what Jamie has long suspected but has never openly acknowledged. Jamie’s own commitment to maintaining the status quo is apparent in his initial resistance to Sal’s idea. He becomes upset when Sal wonders if Peter is not a real human child because this would mean that Peter is a monster who has been deceiving and manipulating him for years.
“Childhood still held out a friendly hand to us, if we wanted to go back to it, while the unexplored country was ahead, beckoning us to come there and see what new pleasures were to be found.”
The Tension Between Childhood and Adulthood is central to this passage as both Jamie and Sal contemplate the possibilities that adulthood has to offer. Caught between childhood and adulthood in their island prison, they bravely choose to embrace adulthood. However, this decision represents an ironically childish attempt to escape, for by choosing to grow up, their main goal is to leave behind everything that childhood means to them. Ultimately, Jamie will learn that adulthood is no escape from the harsher elements of reality.
“So I stayed in that in-between place, between the future with Sally and the past with Peter, because I didn’t know how to set us all free without losing Charlie.”
This passage reveals that despite Jamie’s dreams of maturing, he still harbors childish urges of avoidance. Charlie’s presence is something of a stumbling block for Jamie’s plans, for the boy is far too young to join Jamie and Sal’s bid for adulthood, and Jamie is at a loss as to how to both protect him and pursue his plan of escape. He must choose between remaining a child with Peter or becoming an adult with Sal, but he does not know how to fit Charlie into either option.
“There would have been a life, a boring, ordinary life to Peter but a full life, one that followed the natural order of things.”
Jamie imagines a future for himself that involves a wife and children and feels that Peter has robbed him of a conventional life. Going with Peter to the island and staying young forever has disrupted the lifestyle that Jamie views as being the “natural order of things.” While his escape attempt is doomed to failure, it is this deep resentment that gives him the strength to break free of Peter’s direct control.
“‘We’re growing up, Jamie,’ he said. ‘I wonder why, after all this time.’
‘It’s because we don’t love Peter anymore,’ I said. I’d only just figured this out when I saw Nod’s face. ‘Because we don’t want to be boys and do boy things for always.’”
Jamie realizes that the boy’s unquestioning love for Peter has been keeping them young for all these years. Just as one can no longer remain a child when one is confronted with the realities of the world, the boys can no longer hold onto their youth now that they understand the malicious truths that lie beneath Peter’s veneer of fun and adventure. Now that both Nod and Jamie have diverged from Peter’s desires, they are free to embrace the adulthood they have been barred from for so long.
“Somehow night had fallen again. How did the days pass so quickly then? I felt as though I’d just left to find Charlie, to save him from the Many-Eyed. I felt like I’d been on the island forever, running in circles, trying to escape Peter’s trap.”
This quote foreshadows Peter and Jamie’s final confrontation when Peter reveals that the island created him to provide it with the blood of sacrifice. Because Peter is born of the island itself, the island becomes a near-sentient thing. It represents an extension of Peter’s feelings and desires; because Peter wishes to prevent Jamie’s escape, the island renders escape impossible.
“‘It’s not such a wonderful thing, to be young,’ I said. ‘It’s heartless, and selfish.’
‘But, oh, so free,’ Nod said sadly. ‘So free when you have no worries or cares.’”
Sounding like two regretful old men, Nod and Jamie acknowledge the double-edged sword of childhood. Faced with the realities of their transition to adulthood, they begin to fully realize the extent of their own callous behavior while they were children under Peter’s sway. Yet within this realization lies just as much regret as remorse, for they do miss an existence that was free of cares or worries. The exchange also highlights the true nature of Peter’s indifference to anyone other than himself.
“There was only one person I wanted to kill now, and when he was dead I never wanted to lift a weapon again for the rest of my life.”
Jamie now longs for a life free from the violence of his perpetual childhood, but he is confronted with the painful irony is he can only be free of violence if he commits one last act of great violence against Peter himself. The irony of the moment is further heightened by the realization that Peter is immune to any lasting injury or harm.
“But when you stopped loving me, when you stopped believing—the island let you go, because the island knows your heart and so do I.”
Peter confirms Jamie’s theory that the boys’ love for Peter has kept them eternally young. This quote also highlights the fact that the island is an extension of Peter’s malicious will; the two are inextricable, and Peter will always use this fact to his advantage.
“Peter scoffed. ‘What’s a hug? What’s a kiss? Those things aren’t like running free or swimming in the ocean or laughing and playing all day with your greatest friend in all the world.’”
Peter’s priorities are freedom and fun, a sharp contrast with Jamie’s desire for parental and romantic love, affection, and stability. The reference to a kiss also stands as an oblique reference to the original Peter Pan stories, where a hidden kiss implies that Mrs. Darling met Peter Pan before in her own childhood.
“Peter will never let me go. If I’m not his playmate and friend, then I am to be his playmate and enemy.”
Jamie, as Captain Hook, knows that Peter will never let him leave the island. Instead, Peter has relegated him to the role of an eternal villain. This statement therefore foreshadows the relationship that Peter Pan and Captain Hook have in the broader Peter Pan canon: one of perpetual antagonism and mutual resentment that nonetheless retains an edgy element of fun and play.