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Every moment and every page seems to be lived, not plotted, to a point where you begin feeling like these are people you know, perhaps from around your own town or neighborhood.
I think Matthews is most amazing in how he handles the transitions, the key weird moments of lives where a random happening or thought shapes everything that happens next to someone.
Overall, the book is a very rare combination: one of great literary quality, and also a book that hooks you from the first page, and that you may find yourself addictively reading in one afternoon.
There is a boy named Peter Pan. He sprinkles fairy dust in Wendy and her two brothers. Then he shows them how to fly. He takes them to Neverland and shows them to the Lost Boys who live there. Wendy becomes their mother. She makes up rules, like any other mother would do. The boys have to follow these rules. Everything was fine until Captain Hook came with his crew to where the boys and Wendy were. While Wendy and the boys were at the lagoon, where they go every day after dinner, they see a girl named Tiger Lily, princess of her tribe. She was captured by Smee, one of Captain Hook's men. Then Peter saved her. A few days later Wendy and the boys were on their way to Wendy's house when they too were all captured by Captain Hook. Then Peter saves them. Then the lost boys, Wendy and her brothers go home. All except for Peter.
It is mostly about what the people in the book think is right with childhood. The kids in the book think that if you grow up it is bad, but in our case it is actually good.
Peter Pan is a violent book not really made for children under the age of 10 but people 10 and up can read it. It is violent because of the language that is spoken and the idea that killing could be fun. Also, the vocabulary is very difficult for children under 10 to understand. Even if you're older it is difficult to understand.
Overall, it is a good book but watch out for the violent ideas if you are reading it to little children.
It's difficult to know what to say about a book like this... everybody knows the story. But I guess that unless you've read this book (not just seen a movie or read a retelling), you don't really know the character Peter Pan, and without knowing the character, you don't really know the story. So read it.
By the way, if you enjoy this, you probably would also like "Sentimental Tommy" and its sequel "Tommy and Grizel", both by Barrie. There are differences (for one thing they're not fantasy), but there are also compelling similarities. Anybody who found Peter Pan a deep and slightly bittersweet book would be sure to enjoy them.
-Stephen
One of the best books any child, young or old, can read is Barrie's Peter Pan. Although written in the past century, it has something for any generation at any time. Its humorous views at the world from a child's mind left me rolling over the floor, laughing; the exciting storyline kept me busy with reading until the end; and the serious undertone made me think of whether the world wouldn't be a better place if we realised that deep down, however deep, we are in fact all children. So if YOU are a child, which you most certainly are, get yourself a copy and enjoy your ongoing childhood.
This quirky little mystery is like watching a Nick and Nora Charles Thin Man movie from the '40s. I pictured Keith (the protagonist) and Myra Moody as William Powell and Myrna Loy. The dialogue is full of that elegant, sophisticated banter they spoke so well. Keith, a failed novelist/former screenwriter, just can't keep trouble from finding him. Thus, his escapades, like having an imbecile threaten him with a gun on the beach in broad daylight to stealing a body from a nursing home, make this a laugh-a-minute twists-and-turns kind of novel that you can't put down. And there is a plethora of wacko characters, one of my favorites being the daffy desk clerk at the hotel Keith and Myra reside after their house is trashed. This fragile-egoed schizoid definitely deserves an award for best supporting character in a novel!
The novel goes through many twists and turns with several seemingly unrelated events suddenly coming together and making sense. And after you cut through the humor, there is a seriousness that raises the question of where the dividing line is between obligation to a friend and integrity to oneself. All in all, this was a most enjoyable read. This is a sequel to Greg Matthews' FAR FROM HEAVEN, which I intend to read soon. Let's hope this isn't the end of the series.
Moody is the ulitmate anti-hero. Although he has become more sophisticated than he was when we first met him in "Far from Heaven," his sense of humor had me laughing out loud at several points.
But this is not solely a comic novel. It has moments of beauty,sorrow, and clarity that are uncommon in the mystery genre.
I certainly hope there is a third installment, although the novel's ending has me guessing there will not be. That is a shame. Keith Moody and his smart-ass wife Myra are two of the most likeable charactors I've ever encountered in fiction.
For one thing, Twain's well-documented loathing for organized religion and its hypocrisy comes through loud and clear in this book, especially in the traveling gospel show/whorehouse chapters. This may come as a shock to those who have only read "sanitized-for-publication" novels likeTom Sawyer, but it's the authentic spirit of Twain here. If you have any doubts on that score, find yourself a copy of Twain's "Letters From the Earth" or his even rarer "Christian Science"--a masterful indictment of that cult, written tongue in cheek as a paean of praise to "the world's greatest businesswoman." It'll open your eyes, I promise.
Those who complain that Matthews is bloodthirsty must surely have forgotten the nightmarish scenes of drunken child abuse at the opening of "Huckleberry Finn"; the vicious Sheperdson-Grangerford feud and its extremely bloody climax; the pointless shooting of the village drunk; the brutal tarring and feathering of the Duke and the King, and so on. Huck Finn's story as Twain told it was no bed of roses.
The only place where Matthews falls even a bit short is in the dialog--not surprisingly for an Aussie. Twain was extremely particular about his dialects, going so far as to insert a note at the book's beginning to explain that he was using three or more specific regional dialects, lest the reader suppose that "these characters are trying to talk alike and not succeeding." But only a linguist or a hopeless nitpicker would let the occasional oddities of speech in Matthews' book detract from enjoying this wickedly funny, rollicking tale, fully worthy of the master storyteller himself.
I would like to add a footnote. I was impressed with how familiar the author was with the scenes about which he wrote, from Old Man River, to Indian Country, to the California gold rush territory. What is remarkable is that the author wrote this wonderful book before he had even set foot in the United States. I met the author shortly after the book was published in the United Kingdom. At the time I was US Consul General in London. One of my Vice Consuls had refused a visa to the author as the latter appeared to be impossibly young and naive to be a published author, as he claimed. His claim that he simply wanted to wander around the US to absorb atmosperhere for another book seemed hardly plausible. The publisher himself then came to my office with the author and the book, and had no difficulty convincing me that this young guy (he looked like a teen-ager) was indeed an author and a very talented one at that. After that visa issuance, the author made his first trip to the US and I quickly devoured the book!
Included in the hefty (nearly 2,000 pages) volume is everything you'd expect (player stats, franchise histories, postseason results) and a number of things you might not (Curt Smith's wonderful roster of radio/TV announcers, for instance). It's perfect for whiling away the hours on rainy Sunday afternoons, and invaluable for settling arguments or answering trivia questions.
It would be nice if the next edition included a few more historical essays such as those found in its NFL counterpart, "Total Football II." That's a minor quibble, however, and perhaps impractical considering the voluminous size of the current book. All in all, this is a must-buy for baseball lovers.