Peter and Wendy by J. M. Barrie
J. M. Barrie's classic Peter Pan (1904) tells the story of the Darling children's journey to the magical islands of Neverland with Peter Pan, a young adventurer who refuses to grow up. The omniscient narrator, addressing the audience in the first person, introduces the Darling family, which includes Mr. and Mrs. Darling; their three children, Wendy, John and Michael; and a dog named Nana. The family resides in London, where the children share a nursery. In the present, Wendy tells Mrs. Darling about a boy named Peter Pan, who visits her dreams from a place called Neverland.
After the children go to sleep, Peter Pan unexpectedly walks in through their bedroom window, surprising Mrs. Darling. When Mr. and Mrs. Darling leave the house to attend a nearby dinner, Peter returns to his fairy, Tinker Bell. Wendy wakes up and helps Peter glue his shadow to his body. Peter tells Wendy that he has no parents and that he refuses to become an adult; lives in Neverland with a group of abandoned children who refer to themselves as "the lost children." Intrigued with Neverland, Wendy asks her about fairies, which reminds Peter that he accidentally trapped Tinker Bell inside a locked drawer.
Peter lures Wendy to join him on a trip to Neverland. John and Michael, who have woken up since then, are eager to bond. Peter then blows fairy dust on the three Darling children, and they start flying across the room. Meanwhile, Nana broke into the Darlings' dinner to warn the parents that something is happening with the children, but before the parents arrive at the nursery, the children have already flown with Peter and Tinker Bell out the window and into the stars.
The Darling children, flying over Neverland, find familiar landmarks from their dreams. However, as they prepare to land, the sky darkens; Peter warns them of the pirates on the island, explaining that he is responsible for the loss of Captain James Hook's right hand, having thrown it at the crocodile that ate it. Soon after, the pirates fire a cannon into the sky. John and Michael land in a different area than Wendy and Tinker Bell, and Peter is nowhere to be found.
The narrator introduces the lost children, the rest of the pirates, and the Redskins. Together with Peter, the lost boys live in an underground house. When Wendy and Tinker Bell arrive, the boys initially mistake Wendy for a bird, and one of them, Tootles, shoots her with an arrow, just before Peter arrives. Luckily, Wendy survives and is soon reunited with her siblings, but is still unconscious. Afterward, Peter insists that they build Wendy a house. Once finished, the children knock on Wendy's new door and she invites them to read Cinderella.
Peter and the children convince Wendy to be their mother. Overtime, which is difficult to calculate in Neverland, Wendy, John and Michael get used to living with lost children. As Wendy watches over the children, she worries when John and Michael seem to forget their parents. However, Wendy is confident that her mother has left the window open for her and her siblings to return.
The group decides to visit the Laguna de las Sirenas to live an adventure. While there, two of Hook's companions, Smee and Starkey, arrive at the lagoon, with ...