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Bjarne Tokerud Bookseller
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Don Quixote Miguel Cervantes
Comedy
Adventure
Satire
Classic Literature
USD$800

Description

London: Casell & Company, Limited, undated (c. 1870s). xxviii + 855pp. Tall 4to. Ochre coated cloth. Highly embellished binding, black and gilt decoration on front cover and spine. Blind embossed back cover. 118 illustrations by Dor�, including frontispiece. Very minor foxing within, but generally clean. Small ink stain on edge of textblock, but otherwise very good. That Miguel de Cervantes (c.1547 - 1616) penned one of the most influential works of world literature is hardly debatable - Don Quixote (1605/1615) is often described as the first modern novel. The figure of Don Quixote has become intrinsically linked to Gustave Dor� (1832 - 1883), the French illustrator and artist whose vision of the two has influenced generations of readers, artists, and filmmakers. Dor� illustrated many other canonical works over the course of his career, including the Bible and Dante's Inferno.

About Don Quixote

"Don Quixote" by Miguel de Cervantes is a seminal work in Western literature, often regarded as the first modern novel. Published in two parts, the first in 1605 and the second in 1615, it tells the story of Alonso Quixano, a middle-aged gentleman from the region of La Mancha in central Spain. Obsessed with the chivalric romances of the Middle Ages, he loses his sanity and decides to become a knight-errant, renaming himself Don Quixote. He chooses a simple farmer, Sancho Panza, as his squire, promising him the governorship of an island. The duo embarks on a series of adventures, with Don Quixote seeking to right wrongs and bring justice to the world, driven by his absurdly outdated moral code and understanding of reality. The novel is famous for its satirical examination of the discrepancy between Quixote's fantasy world and the actual world of 17th-century Spain. This theme is most famously illustrated in the episode where Don Quixote fights windmills, mistaking them for giant monsters. Throughout their journeys, the pair encounters thieves, prostitutes, a chain gang, and various other characters, often causing more harm than good in their attempts to help. "Don Quixote" explores themes of truth and justice, the transition from the old world to the new, and the idea of madness versus sanity. Cervantes employs a narrative structure that includes stories within stories, allowing him to critique the social and literary conventions of his time. The novel has had a profound influence on the development of prose fiction and is considered a precursor to the modern novel. It is celebrated for its humor, moral integrity, and its deep humanity, offering a complex reflection on the nature of reality and the importance of empathy.