Fantasy
A recurring idea that shapes Peter Pan.

Peter Pan’s Neverland adventure mixes play, danger, memory, and the refusal—or impossibility—of growing up.
Peter Pan’s Neverland adventure mixes play, danger, memory, and the refusal—or impossibility—of growing up.
The author of Peter Pan.
Explore author profileThis work develops its ideas directly rather than through a character-led narrative.
Peter Pan belongs to the literary and cultural world of Public-domain literature.
Peter Pan’s Neverland adventure mixes play, danger, memory, and the refusal—or impossibility—of growing up.
Begin by following how fantasy and children-fantasy shape the work’s central choices.
Source and editorial notice
Public-domain source information is preserved with the published edition. This reading guide was created with AI assistance and reviewed before publication.