Captivated: J.M. Barrie, the Du Mauriers and the Dark Side of Neverland

Piers Dudgeon

Captivated: J.M. Barrie, the Du Mauriers and the Dark Side of Neverland
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Vintage
Country
United Kingdom
Published
3 August 2009
Pages
352
ISBN
9780099520450

Captivated: J.M. Barrie, the Du Mauriers and the Dark Side of Neverland

Piers Dudgeon

Captivated is a true story of genius and possession. The background is the turn of the century, when a late-nineteenth-century world of mesmerists, psychics, trancers and table-turners gave way to a new twentieth-century age of psychology. The central character is the creator of Peter Pan, the famous novelist and playwright J. M. Barrie, a man tormented by inner demons since childhood. Barrie developed a consuming interest in the du Maurier family, beginning with George du Maurier, author of Trilby , a bestselling novel featuring his creation Svengali.In Trilby , George showed how it is possible, by means of hypnosis, for one person to gain control over the mind of another. Barrie made his move on the du Maurier family immediately after George died, assuming George’s mantel and using his ideas to dominate both his daughter Sylvia and his son Gerald. Soon Barrie was ‘Uncle Jim’ to Sylvia’s five sons and Gerald’s three daughters, playing romping games of adventure and make-believe, and inviting the children into the transcendental world of Neverland.Four of the boys (the ‘lost boys’ of Peter Pan) and one of the girls (the imaginative tomboy Daphne) were captivated. This fascinating book delves deep, makes links and yields up secrets. It is a story of bliss corrupted by greed which masquerades as supernatural power. It tells how Barrie’s victims - whom he would have not grow up - were lost to breakdown, suicide or an early death when they did. Daphne du Maurier, author of Rebecca , emerges as the lost boys’ surprise companion and the enigmatic chronicler of their fate. Captivated is about writing and the world of the imagination: it is a singular example of art being used not only to imitate life, but darkly to transform it. Piers Dudgeon knew Daphne du Maurier and worked with her in the 1980s. When he discovered that she had put a moratorium on publication of her adolescent diaries until fifty years after her death, he was prompted to begin his researches into her background. What was the mystery that had Daphne been so keen to suppress?

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