The first part of the delightful history of the most ingenious knight Don Quixote of the Mancha

519 pages

English language

Published 1937 by P.F. Collier & Son.

OCLC Number:
18680064

View on OpenLibrary

Although published nearly 400 years ago in Spanish, this parody of the chivalrous life remains amazingly familiar in translation today-perhaps from the extensive influence it has played on novelists, playwrights and even composers over the centuries, or perhaps from its eternal story of the childlike and comic view of a decayed world by a madman stuck in a golden past.

116 editions

Riding Beside a Man Who Refused to Accept the World as It Was

Reading Don Quixote felt like traveling with someone who chose imagination not as an escape, but as a form of resistance. From the first pages, I sensed that this was more than a comic tale. Miguel de Cervantes builds a story where laughter and sadness exist side by side, and I felt both almost constantly. Don Quixote’s decision to become a knight after consuming too many chivalric romances struck me as absurd at first, yet I quickly felt drawn to his seriousness. He believes deeply, and that belief carries its own dignity.

As Don Quixote rides across Spain with Sancho Panza, I found myself shifting between amusement and sympathy. Sancho’s grounded logic and hunger for reward balanced Quixote’s lofty ideals, and their conversations felt like debates between realism and hope. I often laughed at their misadventures, especially the famous battles with imagined giants and false enemies. Still, beneath the …

Subjects

  • Spanish fiction -- 17 century -- Translations into English.
  • Adventure fiction, Spanish.
  • Quests -- Fiction.
  • Squires -- Spain -- Fiction.
  • Quixote, Don (Fictitious character) -- Fiction.
  • Spain -- History -- 16th century -- Fiction.