The Adventures of Mary Darling, by Pat Murphy (Tachyon)
Peter Pan: We’ve all read the book, seen the play, or
watched the animated film, so we know the drill: In Victorian London, three
children are swept away to Neverland by PeterPanSpiritOfYouth, where they have
many adventures battling pirates led by the dastardly Captain Hook. They leave
behind a frantic, ineffectual mother, a bombastic, equally ineffective father,
and a drooling dog nanny. Author Pat Murphy asks, Is that really what happened?
What if Mary Darling had once been spirited away to be a “Mother” to the Lost
Boys, despite her insistence that she is not a Mother? What if she
understands all too well the deception and peril of the place and its capricious
leader?
In Murphy’s retelling, after emerging from the first horrific
shock of finding her children missing, with only one place they could have gone,
Mary Darling determines to rescue them herself. Under the innocuous facade of a
Victorian wife lies a powerful woman who has fought her way free of Neverland with
considerable piratical skills. Of course, she encounters opposition, first in her
husband, George, who is loving but befuddled by her “independent ways.” A more
significant barrier comes from her uncle, Doctor John Watson, who enlists his
friend, Sherlock Holmes, in determining what ails her. Holmes decides that Mary
is the prime suspect in the disappearance of her children.
As Mary embarks on her quest to rescue her children before
they either starve to death in Neverland or fall prey to Pan’s careless
disregard for human life, her past reveals itself in layers. In past and
present, we meet old friends and allies, people whose lives have been forever
altered by their contact with Neverland. We also discover the reality behind J.
M. Barrie’s imperialistic misrepresentation of indigenous peoples, the role and
power of women, and the importance of memory.
The Adventures of Mary Darling is a brilliant re-imagining
of a familiar tale, laying bare its folly and portraying the ingenuity, skill,
and heroism of Mary and a host of other characters, invented and glossed-over. My
favorite was James, a sweet gay boy, one of a series of Pan’s “Toodles,” and who
later as Captain Hook proves to be one of Mary’s staunchest and most able supporters.
It should come as neither surprise nor spoiler that Mr. Holmes never appreciates
his loss in insisting that logic is the only reality.
Highly recommended.
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