Don Quixote has become so entranced reading tales of chivalry that he decides to turn knight errant himself. In the company of his faithful squire, Sancho Panza, these exploits blossom in all sorts of wonderful ways. While Quixote's fancy often leads him astray--he tilts at windmills, imagining them to be giants--Sancho acquires cunning and a certain sagacity. Sane madman and wise fool, they roam the world together-and together they have haunted readers' imaginations for nearly four hundred years.
With its experimental form and literary playfulness, Don Quixote has been generally recognized as the first modern novel. This Penguin Classics edition, with its beautiful new cover design, includes John Rutherford's masterly translation, which does full justice to the energy and wit of Cervantes's prose, as well as a brilliant critical introduction by Roberto Gonzalez Echevarriá.
Lin-Manuel Miranda is an actor, writer and filmmaker.
Alright, you enormous, magnificent bastard, It took the better part of a year, but I finally finished you ... You contain so much about how to be alive and I’m grateful for our time together. Merry Xmas.
I am one half of @MarinerJackUK. I am a bookworm, cardmaker and scrapbooker. Complete nerd 😬
On page 196 of 1056 of Don Quixote, by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra https://t.co/48CPzRt1KT
Account reporting relevant events that happened on the current day, no matter when you read this, from ~1400 to the present. Tweets are daily. @EnEsteDiaPaso
Today in 1605, 418 years ago: in Spain the first part of El ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la Mancha, by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, is published. #OnThisDay
"A more profound and powerful work than this is not to be met with...The final and greatest utterance of the human mind." --Fyodor Dostoyevsky
"What a monument is this book! How its creative genius, critical, free, and human, soars above its age!" --Thomas Mann
"Don Quixote looms so wonderfully above the skyline of literature, a gaunt giant on a lean nag, that the book lives and will live through his sheer vitality....The parody has become a paragon." --Vladimir Nabokov