Dudgeon also portrays Barrie as a dark and troubled man who may have used hypnotism to gain an obsessive control over the Du Maurier boys and their mother. He goes on to look at Barrie's link to the tragic demise of the boys, from the drowning of Michael to the suicide of Peter.... this will appeal most to those with a specific interest in these authors.
Meticulous and highly provocative... Dudgeon knows what he's doing and builds his case with precision and coolness... It's a gripping read that exposes the dark side to two seemingly innocent activities, writing and loving children... Dudgeon has exposed, in quite a magnificent way, the power and potential for abuse in both.
A rattling grisly read... 'May God blast anyone who writes a biography of me, ' Barrie warned and his curse was surely aimed at Dudgeon, who goes further than any other biographer... I defy you not to be captivated.--Frances Wilson
Dudgeon...has negotiated the dark back-tracks and by-ways of Barrie's chilling Neverland.... He tells a terrible story without sentimentality, without sensationalism and without undue psychologising... Intelligently and feelingly done.--Brian Morton
A fascinating account of the psychological web in which Barrie trapped the tragic du Maurier family.--David Lodge, author of Author, Author
A riveting joy. I was literally captivated by this story. Poor scintillating du Mauriers. Poor boys....I felt as if I was living it.--Nina Auerbach, author of Daphne du Maurier: Haunted Heiress
Dudgeon's portrait of Barrie--as a man who filled the vacuum of his own sexual impotence by a compulsive desire to possess the family who inspired his most famous creation, Peter Pan--will be of interest to anyone who has followed the twists of the du Maurier family history.--Justine Picardie, author of Daphne
A history of psychological domination and submission, unnatural family relations, predatory abuse and suicide.
--Michael Dirda
Neverland has hot- and cold-running secrets, as well as tentacles that extend out to touch Henry James, D. H. Lawrence, and Arthur Conan Doyle.--Janet Maslin
Tells the tragic story of the author of the beloved children's novel, who learned hypnosis to captivate and psychologically abuse a family with whom he had become obsessed, the very family that inspired the Darlings of Peter Pan, in a book that relates how Barrie altered a Du Maurier family member's will after her death and drove several others to nervous breakdown and suicide.