{{Short description|1932 children's book by Arthur Ransome}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{Infobox book | <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Novels or Wikipedia:WikiProject_Books --> | name = Peter Duck | title_orig = | translator = | image = PDuck.jpg | alt = Typical cover art depicting a montage of Arthur Ransome's own illustrations from the book | caption = First edition | author = Arthur Ransome | cover_artist = Arthur Ransome | country = United Kingdom | language = English | series = Swallows and Amazons series | genre = Children's books | publisher = Jonathan Cape | release_date = 1932 | media_type = Print (Hardcover & Paperback) | pages = | isbn = 0-613-77197-4 | isbn_note = <br />978-1-56792-429-9 (David R. Godine, Publisher: paperback, 1987, 2010) | preceded_by = Swallowdale | followed_by = Winter Holiday }}
'''''Peter Duck''''' is the third book in the ''Swallows and Amazons'' series by Arthur Ransome. The Swallows and Amazons sail to Crab Island with Captain Flint and Peter Duck, an old sailor, to recover buried treasure. During the voyage the ''Wildcat'' (Captain Flint's ship) is chased by another vessel, the ''Viper'', whose piratical crew are also intending to recover the treasure.
The book, first published in 1932, is considered to be one of the metafictional books in the series, along with ''Missee Lee'' and perhaps ''Great Northern?''. Most of the book was written in Aleppo where Ransome was staying with the Altounyans.<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-37049314 BBC: "Swallows and Amazons: The Syria connection"]</ref>
==Chronology== By publication date, ''Peter Duck'' is the third book in the series, but the story is supposed to be one created by the Swallows and Amazons while staying on a Norfolk wherry with Captain Flint in the winter between the first two books. Two early chapters describing this creation process were written by Arthur Ransome before he started ''Swallowdale''. This opening was discarded from the final version of the book when it was published after ''Swallowdale''. However, Peter Duck is mentioned in ''Swallowdale'' as Titty's imaginary friend from a story made up by the Swallows and Amazons.<ref>Hardyment (1984) page 148</ref>
==Plot summary== The Swallows and Amazons are in Lowestoft, preparing for a cruise aboard a schooner, the ''Wild Cat'', with Captain Flint, the Blacketts' uncle Jim Turner. Unfortunately the other adult (Sam Bideford) cannot come and so the cruise is threatened until Peter Duck, an elderly seaman, offers to come along to help. In the harbour a larger black schooner, the ''Viper'', is fitting out for a voyage and Peter Duck's presence aboard the ''Wild Cat'' interests Black Jake, the ''Viper''’s captain. Peter Duck spins a yarn about a treasure that he saw being buried long ago, when marooned on a desert island in the Caribbean Sea, and which Black Jake wants to find. When the ''Wild Cat'' sails, the ''Viper'' is quick to follow and trails her down the English Channel, at one point threatening to board her in the night.
In a fog off Land's End, the crew of the ''Wild Cat'' give the ''Viper'' the slip but pick up the ''Viper''’s cabin boy, Bill, who has been set adrift to try and fool the ''Wild Cat''’s crew with false signals. They continue across the Atlantic Ocean to Crab Island where they spend several days searching in vain for Peter Duck's treasure.
When a hurricane blows up, Peter Duck and Captain Flint take the ''Wild Cat'' out to sea to ride out the storm, leaving the Swallows and Amazons ashore. There is an earthquake during the storm, and when the schooner returns all the paths to the treasure-hunters' camp are blocked by landslides and fallen trees. However, a fallen palm tree exposes a small box, Peter Duck's treasure, which the children recover. They decide to sail round to the anchorage as the land route is blocked.
While Captain Flint attempts to cross the island to rescue the Swallows and Amazons, the ''Viper'' arrives and Peter Duck and Bill are captured. The crew of the ''Viper'' also go ashore to look for the treasure. The children rescue Peter Duck and Bill, and then the ''Wild Cat'' sails back to the other side and they pick up Captain Flint just before Black Jake arrives. They attempt to sail away from the island but the wind dies and the ''Viper'' looks like catching them, but they are saved by a waterspout which destroys the ''Viper''. They return home safely without further incident. The contents of the treasure chest proves to be a collection of nautical literature and a sizeable number of pearls, which --- though indeed of considerable value --- turn out to not really be worth the vast fortune that one might have expected in a buccaneer's buried chest. The story's main characters divide up the assets appropriately, with funds going to sensible and practical ventures.
==References== {{Reflist}}
===Further reading=== *''Arthur Ransome and Capt. Flint's Trunk'' by [https://web.archive.org/web/20191005165131/https://christinahardyment.co.uk/ Christina Hardyment], 1984, {{ISBN|0-224-02590-2}} includes the two discarded chapters with the back story of the creation of ''Peter Duck'' by the Swallows and Amazons.
==External links== * {{FadedPage|id=20180324|name=Peter Duck}}
{{SwallowsandAmazonsbooks}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Peter Duck}} Category:1932 British novels Category:1932 children's books Category:Jonathan Cape books Category:Metafictional novels Category:Novels set in the Caribbean Category:Novels set on ships Category:Swallows and Amazons series Category:Children's books set in the Caribbean Category:Children's books set in Suffolk Category:Children's books set on ships