Don Quijote de la Mancha

by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
Don Quijote de la Mancha  
published November 2004 by Alfaguara
first published 2001
binding Hardcover
isbn 8420467286   (isbn13: 9788420467283)
pages 1360
description Launched simultaneously in Spain and the Americas, this work aims to divulge the great novel of Spanish Literature by means of a high quality, well-ta...more
date added
02-02-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 5669)



John
04/03/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in March, 2008
recommended to John by: Ted Hoagland
recommends it for: Classics readers, knights-fiction readers
In short: it's a frickin' classic of world literature. Read it.

In slightly longer, but still short: an amusing an infamous first fifty pages with lots of hit-or-miss after that. The second half gets dreadfully stale, but has an interesting ending from a literary analytical standpoint.

In long: I'm using this review space as a journal of reading the incredible mountain of pages.

Day 1: Here goes nothing. Here come 1,000 pages of translated text.

The opening was insufferably cheeky, a...more
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John
03/11/08

bookshelves: novel
Read in March, 2006
Whew. I did it. I'm ready to run the New York Marathon, climb Mount Everest, swim the Mekong River, and hunt the nefarious arctic narwhale, now that I've read Don Quixote in its entirety. And I am truly a better person for it.

Until now, I've only read Don Quixote in small doses, reading his battle with the windmills or his mistaking a barber's washbin for the Helmet of Mambrino out of context, either for class or in anthologies. After reading the first book in sequence, I'm ashamed of mysel...more
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Steve
01/15/08

Read in January, 2008
A classic in every sense of the word.

Called “the Spanish Bible”, the story of the Man from La Mancha (1605) and the Return of the Man from La Mancha (1615) is one of the most famous literary works in the world and rightfully so. Here, the two works are placed in a single volume and, as translated by Edith Grossman, the characters come crazily alive.

In the first book, we are introduced to Alonso Quixano, an intelligent man who spends too much time reading chivalric novels and romantic ta...more
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Belarius
bookshelves: fiction-finished, literature
Read in April, 2004
recommends it for: The Literati And Pseudoliterati
I'll be the first to admit it: I'm a fan of popular fiction. I desire enjoyment from certain factors of pacing and style that the literary elite consider "common" and I, in turn, generally find "literature" to be incredibly pretentious. This has led me to hold what some might consider "uncultured" opinions about various great works.

Which brings us to Don Quixote, which many in the literary elite consider to be the greatest novel ever written.

Did I love Don...more
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Nicholas
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: Everyone
This book took me a long time to read. It is over 1,000 pages long! I had been wanting to read it for a long time, because it is considered the first novel and because the Spaniards are so proud of it and of Miguel Cervantes (the author). There are streets, libraries, buildings, etc. all over the place named after him or his book.

The thing that amazed me about this book is how entertaining it was, even though it was so long. It is usually difficult for long books to hold my interest but this...more
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Alison
03/05/08

Read in March, 2008
recommended to Alison by: Jorge Luis Borges
Woo-hoo, Brooke owes me a beer (which I'll feed to Karl)!

I don't know if it was because I was tired (I only read it in bed before going to sleep at night), but after 6 months I'd gotten through only the first 100-odd pages. But then it (or I) started flying. The first thing that got me was the cat joke (im in yr cavalcade saturizing yr litrary deloojuns), then the rapidly escalating violence, and by the time Sancho got tossed in a blanket, I was laughing out loud every few pages.

Nothin...more
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Tucker
06/10/08

Read in May, 2007
As a kid did you ever dream about being a knight like the ones in the books you read? Well in Don Quixote, a delusional 50 year old man starts trying to fulfill this dream. Journeying through Spain with his squire Sancho Panza, Don Quixote finds many "adventures" that to most people wouldn't seem like adventures at all, but to Don Quixote who is thinks windmills are giants, and a flock of sheep is an army, anything is an adventure.

One very enjoyable part is that the main charac...more
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Papershredder
Well, third time was the charm in this case. I'll spare you the personal history this book and I have.

I read the book on my own, not part of school. Both volumes, to the last word. I just read a modern fantasy novel that was about 900 pages, in about 1.5 weeks. This book (about 1000 or so pages)took me nearly 1.5 years. I read about 50 other books in this period as sometimes I dreaded the DQ. This is not a book to try to read in bed, unless your doing late fall trail work in the remote wild...more
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Paul
02/02/08

No question - finishing this book is a triumph. There are some real comical parts, and obviously Cervantes is mocking ridiculous literary romances. More so than remembering all the little instances in the book, one remembers the characters - Don Quixote - the idealistic, bumbling, adventure-seeking, crazy (?) knight, and his earthy, not-so-intelligent, practical squire, Sancho Panza.

But the question is, as it is in Hamlet, is Don Quixote really crazy. And I think the answer, as it is in Ham...more
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Jamie
01/13/08

Read in January, 2008
What can be said about a book of this scope that has already been said. I'll give mine in brief.

I'm still working on this one. This is my second 800+ book in a row. So it has taken me longer than I had hoped. I've become emotionally attached to all these characters.

With Rutherford's translation it is hard to believe it was written so long ago. I've become emotionally attached to all these characters. With such ease Cervantes creates such depth to each of his characters no matter ...more
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Jessica
bookshelves: happyendings-, wish-i-owned
Read in January, 2004
recommends it for: knights errant; the sorrowful-faced
I really regret leaving my edition of this book on the curb when I moved out of that Brooklyn apartment. I was like, "Oh, super translation and lovely red cover, but it's really heavy and it's not like I'm gonna need to reread *Don Quixote* any time soon..... I need to quit being such a materialistic packrat!" Actually, I tossed tons of great stuff during that move, but this is the book I've regretted the most.

I DREAMT about this book on Saturday night. I had this really stressful ...more
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Matt
02/29/08

Read in September, 2006
Reading this book will open another door in your appreciation of all subsequent literature. The man from whom the phrase "tilting at windmills" originated, Cervantes created in his mock epic one of the first critical satires of chivalric romance. But more than that, he gave readers a daringly new psychological portrait of a man undaunted by reality in his quest to emulate the heroics of knight-errantry. Following the tradition of Amadis de Gaul, Don Belianis, and Reinaldos of Montalban...more
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Sean
11/11/07

For a four hundred year old novel, this one was both hilarious and entertaining. Parts of it certainly drag (there's an entire novella unrelated to Don Quixote's adventures), and it is 1050 pages, but I thought it was overall more than worth the effort.

Don Quixote, driven mad by reading "books of chivalry", sets out into 17th century Spain as a knight errant, calling himself the Knight of the Rueful Figure. To him, inns are castles, windmills are giants, and a milkmaid in a neigh...more
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Stephanie
bookshelves: 1001-books
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: scholars
Finally finished! Took me I'm guessing 12-18 mos. to read this. I set it down a couple times for long periods of time, and have read countless books since I started this one.

I really had hoped that this would just grab me. I love that song, "The Impossible Dream". I have to say now that the meaning of that song and the show it was written for may have been gleaned from the source material the writers, but I myself didn't get anything like that directly from the source material....more
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Joanna
04/03/08

bookshelves: classics
Read in March, 2008
I've wanted to read this book since 1996 when my friend Becky introduced me to the musical Man of La Mancha with Peter O'Toole, which I loved. I started reading the book shortly thereafter, but I didn't get very far. (This is a a tome of 940 pages, after all.)

This time I finished it, and, although I don't plan to read it again, I did enjoy it, or most of it. The first half was a bit dark, with Don Quixote unwittingly wronging more rights than he righted wrongs. The second half was...more
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Scott
Scott is currently reading it (review of isbn 0060934344)
02/15/08

bookshelves: currently-reading
Read in June, 2007
the elixir of fierabras does not, apparently, heal all wounds. this book is chock full of such inane morals, and it is mostly very slow, if not boring (warrior lists), trite (fake sonnets), or excessively ridiculous (so there was sancho shitting himself!).

that said, the myth of DQ has clearly outpaced the gaunt knight of the sorrowful countenance and his decrepit nag. it is then more (culturally) important to know about quixoticism than it is to know about DQ and read the book. with this ...more
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Greg
01/09/08

Read in July, 2006
Reading Cervantes' massive 400-year-old novel may seem to be a challenge analogous to the titular errant knight's ill-advised confrontation with the windmill, however, as with Quixote's famed inanimate opponent, appearances are deceiving. Despite its age, Quixote holds up remarkably well: the characters still charm, the wit still bites and the prose feels crisp and modern – no doubt a testament to Grossman's vivacious translation. However, as purposefully written by Cervantes in the style of t...more
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Marc
06/03/08

bookshelves: bottomshelf
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Marc by: humanity
recommends it for: humanity
I finally did it. It only took about 7 months but I conquered the beast.

Some of it is totally stupid. most of it its totally stupid. But in that important influenced all following literature kind of way. The parts that are great are really great, mostly contained in part two where the characters actually develop, the stories become much more cohesive and the whole things becomes incorrigibly self referential. In fact if I could get away with it I would suggest reading a 5 page synopsis of pa...more
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keith
keith rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars