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Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens

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ISBN-10: 0486466078

ISBN-13: 9780486466071

Edition: 2008 (Unabridged)

Authors: James Matthew Barrie, Arthur Rackham

List price: $19.95
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Description:

Fifty full-color illustrations by Rackham add breathtaking depth to Barrie's timeless tale of "the boy who wouldn't grow up." In this beautifully designed hardcover keepsake of an early edition of the beloved Peter Pan story, the young hero of Neverland makes his very first appearance beside Wendy, her brothers, Captain Hook, and the fearless Lost Boys.
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Book details

List price: $19.95
Copyright year: 2008
Publisher: Dover Publications, Incorporated
Publication date: 9/19/2008
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 192
Size: 8.23" wide x 9.49" long x 0.47" tall
Weight: 1.320
Language: English

James Matthew Barrie, the creator of Peter Pan, was born on May 9, 1860, in Kirriemuir, Angus, Scotland. His idyllic boyhood was shattered by his brother's death when Barrie was six. His own grief and that of his mother influenced the rest of his life. Through his work, he sought to recapture the carefree joy of his first six years. Barrie came to London as a freelance writer in 1885. His early fiction, Auld Licht Idylls (1888) and A Window in Thrums (1889), were inspired by his youth in Kirriemuir. After publishing a biography of his mother Margaret Ogilvy and the autobiographical novel Sentimental Tommy, about a boy living in a dream world (1896), he concentrated on writing plays. The…    

Arthur Rackham was born in London, England. At the age of 18, he worked as a clerk at the Westminster Fire Office and began studying part-time at the Lambeth School of Art. In 1892 he left his job and started working for The Westminster Budget as a reporter and illustrator. His first book illustrations were published in 1893 in To the Other Side by Thomas Rhodes, but his first serious commission was in 1894 for The Dolly Dialogues, the collected sketches of Anthony Hope, who later went on to write The Prisoner of Zenda. Book illustrating then became Rackham's career for the rest of his life. Rackham invented his own unique technique which resembled photographic reproduction; he would first…