Two things:
1. You will enjoy this more if you do not read reviews containing reader reactions or plot summaries beforehand. Just stop, you'll spoil your enjoyment of it. This applies to all books, but this one particularly so. Don't read the bottom of this review till you are finished.
2. Like Evens's other works, I think this book is for adults, not for children. This is really very good, but I advise you read it first before gifting it or making a book club suggestion.
That is all you need to know. Now if the cover artwork appeal to you, read it, and if not, don't.
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**Major Spoilers Below**
Postread Analysis: Is Panther evil?
**Major Spoilers Alert**
On my first reading I just saw this as a horror story, everything is imaginary, it was too confusing for me to understand... etc.
But I was really just in denial about the monkeyitis treatment procedure.
I'm pretty sure now that this about sexual abuse after reading other reviews and playing closer attention to some things. This interpretation makes the foreword awkward as the book is in part for Helen, 'who once received a visit from Panther'.
I'm going to be pretty 'loose' with terms and filling in blanks. Ultimately it still remains difficult to fully understand the motive and culpability of Panther in the abuse:
•Christine is red/blue, lion is blue/red/green, 'pantherland' is black/white. The most explicit hint of sexual abuse to me is that Christine's underwear changes from red to blue after her 'party nightmare'. Also, I think I can see an outline of a naked female body if you merge the pattern above the headboard and the bedpost leg (made explicitly foot-shaped) in the black and white party nightmare laughing gas two page spread.
Bad Panther
•Though it seems like Panther is quietly sleeping beside Christine, I think he's doing something bad... I think Panther lets others from Pantherland into Christine's room while she sleeps, but otherwise guards her. The sleep scene the night before Chapter 4 Bonzo disappears, Bonzo is in the middle of one of the pages staring at the ceiling frightened. This would explain why Bonzo (and not Flipper) tries to warn Christine and why Panther would eat him rather than take an easier and less severe method (wipe off the message or lie). This would also explain how 'Not-Bonzo' knows Christine's name as soon as he arrives.
Panther enables potential abusers to visit Christine.
•On the first night Not-Bonzo stays over and Christine is lulled to sleep, there is a black/white scene showing Christine, Panther and Not-Bonzo on the bed, and on the next page, Christine wakes bedraggled and says 'I had a dream...You were there and you were mad at me... Like an animal... The sky was...made of tissue paper. And it tore....behind it everything was black'.
To me all this might suggests Panther and not-Bonzo take Christine take back to a part of Pantherland that is made to look like the normal world. Whether sexual abuse occurs is unclear, but here Panther aids in the deception that this was Bonzo and for whatever night event that made her 'feel weird' and scream. In my mind, not-Bonzo abuses here and in the final scene.
Panther at least aids in the deception that leads to the initial abuse by others to Christine while she is asleep.
'Not-bad' Panther
•A point in favour of Panther is that Panther is not the gatekeeper to Christine's room, as 'the mob' manage to enter Christine's room unassisted. However, they knew where to come due to Panther deliberately or inadvertently inviting many other Pantherland creatures to Christine's room while she is sleeping. It is unclear to me whether he actually encourages people (as in Pantherland daemons) to visit at night, but as the dream scenes get more vibrant and blacker with no increase in daytime callers, he probably does in some way bring the attention here by sleeping over.
Panther might have promoted, but is powerless to prevent, abusers entering Christine's room from Pantherland.
•Panther initiates the dances, the game of twister (look at those eyes!), and massages, but backs off at any sign of pain, fear or shame, as he leaves for what seems for good when Lucy hides her body from him for the first time on the last page. After Christine rejects Panther on the last page, he appears an ugly black with spots on—the seductive illusion has been broken. Despite his deviousness I doubt Panther ever had any sexual contact outside of the pages we see. Panther also does try prevent the initial abuse by others to Christine while she is awake.
Though Panther is seducing Christine, he tries to stop anything that is against her 'consent'.
In summary, it seems Panther was a protective paedophile who did not himself 'abuse' Christine, but directly introduced, made alibis for, and failed to prevent the actions of the abuser. In that respect—not excusing the deceit, inappropriateness and creepiness of all of this—I see Panther's greater evil was in being incapable of preventing Christine from the far greater damage from 'the mob' that he was directly responsible for bringing, relative to what he did to Christine himself. Or alternatively, we could just blame f***ing Flipper for keeping his big jaws shut.